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Nicotinamide for the treatment of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.

Mahmoud AbdellatifViktoria Trummer-HerbstFranziska KoserSylvère DurandRui AdãoFrancisco Vasques-NóvoaJohanna K FreundtJulia VoglhuberMaria-Rosaria PricoloMichael KasaClara TürkFanny AprahamianElías Herrero-GalánSebastian J HoferTobias PendlLavinia RechJulia KarglNathaly Anto-MichelSenka Ljubojevic-HolzerJulia SchipkeChristina BrandenbergerMartina AuerRenate SchreiberChintan N KoyaniAkos HeinemannAndreas ZirlikAlbrecht SchmidtDirk von LewinskiDaniel ScherrPeter P RainerJulia von MaltzahnChristian MühlfeldMarcus KruegerSaša FrankFrank MadeoTobias EisenbergAndreas ProkeschAdelino F Leite-MoreiraAndré P LourençoJorge Alegre-CebolladaStefan KiechlWolfgang A LinkeGuido KroemerSimon Sedej
Published in: Science translational medicine (2021)
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is a highly prevalent and intractable form of cardiac decompensation commonly associated with diastolic dysfunction. Here, we show that diastolic dysfunction in patients with HFpEF is associated with a cardiac deficit in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Elevating NAD+ by oral supplementation of its precursor, nicotinamide, improved diastolic dysfunction induced by aging (in 2-year-old C57BL/6J mice), hypertension (in Dahl salt-sensitive rats), or cardiometabolic syndrome (in ZSF1 obese rats). This effect was mediated partly through alleviated systemic comorbidities and enhanced myocardial bioenergetics. Simultaneously, nicotinamide directly improved cardiomyocyte passive stiffness and calcium-dependent active relaxation through increased deacetylation of titin and the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium adenosine triphosphatase 2a, respectively. In a long-term human cohort study, high dietary intake of naturally occurring NAD+ precursors was associated with lower blood pressure and reduced risk of cardiac mortality. Collectively, these results suggest NAD+ precursors, and especially nicotinamide, as potential therapeutic agents to treat diastolic dysfunction and HFpEF in humans.
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