4.7 Article

Age-Dependent Decline of NAD+-Universal Truth or Confounded Consensus?

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14010101

Keywords

NAD(+); aging; yeast; C; elegans; mouse; rat; monkey; human

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This review examines the levels of NAD(+) in different species and investigates whether overall NAD(+) levels decrease with aging. The evidence to support this claim is limited, especially in humans, where NAD(+) levels during aging are poorly characterized. Larger studies are needed to assess how NAD(+) levels develop with aging in various tissues.
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) is an essential molecule involved in various metabolic reactions, acting as an electron donor in the electron transport chain and as a co-factor for NAD(+)-dependent enzymes. In the early 2000s, reports that NAD(+) declines with aging introduced the notion that NAD(+) metabolism is globally and progressively impaired with age. Since then, NAD(+) became an attractive target for potential pharmacological therapies aiming to increase NAD(+) levels to promote vitality and protect against age-related diseases. This review summarizes and discusses a collection of studies that report the levels of NAD(+) with aging in different species (i.e., yeast, C. elegans, rat, mouse, monkey, and human), to determine whether the notion that overall NAD(+) levels decrease with aging stands true. We find that, despite systematic claims of overall changes in NAD(+) levels with aging, the evidence to support such claims is very limited and often restricted to a single tissue or cell type. This is particularly true in humans, where the development of NAD(+) levels during aging is still poorly characterized. There is a need for much larger, preferably longitudinal, studies to assess how NAD(+) levels develop with aging in various tissues. This will strengthen our conclusions on NAD metabolism during aging and should provide a foundation for better pharmacological targeting of relevant tissues.

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