De novo NAD+ biosynthetic impairment in acute kidney injury in humans.
Ali Poyan MehrMei T TranKenneth M RaltoDavid E LeafVaughan WashcoJoseph MessmerAdam LernerAjay KherSteven H KimCharbel C KhouryShoshana J HerzigMary E TrovatoNoemie Simon-TillauxMatthew R LynchRavi I ThadhaniAndrew T ChanKamal R KhabbazEugene P RheeSushrut S WaikarAnders H BergSamir M ParikhPublished in: Nature medicine (2018)
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) extends longevity in experimental organisms, raising interest in its impact on human health. De novo NAD+ biosynthesis from tryptophan is evolutionarily conserved yet considered supplanted among higher species by biosynthesis from nicotinamide (NAM). Here we show that a bottleneck enzyme in de novo biosynthesis, quinolinate phosphoribosyltransferase (QPRT), defends renal NAD+ and mediates resistance to acute kidney injury (AKI). Following murine AKI, renal NAD+ fell, quinolinate rose, and QPRT declined. QPRT+/- mice exhibited higher quinolinate, lower NAD+, and higher AKI susceptibility. Metabolomics suggested an elevated urinary quinolinate/tryptophan ratio (uQ/T) as an indicator of reduced QPRT. Elevated uQ/T predicted AKI and other adverse outcomes in critically ill patients. A phase 1 placebo-controlled study of oral NAM demonstrated a dose-related increase in circulating NAD+ metabolites. NAM was well tolerated and was associated with less AKI. Therefore, impaired NAD+ biosynthesis may be a feature of high-risk hospitalizations for which NAD+ augmentation could be beneficial.