4.6 Article

TNF regulates cellular NAD+ metabolism in primary macrophages

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 342, Issue 4, Pages 1312-1318

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2006.02.109

Keywords

NAD(+); TNF; metabolism; macrophage; CD38; CD157; IDO; PBEF; NAD(+) kinase; ADP-ribosyl cyclase; NAD(+) synthase; murine

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [AG23176, AG14917] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK70526] Funding Source: Medline

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The inflammatory cytokine TNF is known to affect glucose and lipid metabolism, where its action leads to a cachexic state. Despite a well-established connection of TNF to metabolism, the relationship between TNF and NAD(+) metabolism remains unclear. In this report, we evaluated the effects of TNF oil NAD(+) metabolism in cells that are TNF's primary autocrine target-macrophages. We designed real-time PCR primers to all NAD(+) metabolic enzymes, which we used to examine TNF-induced changes over time. We found that TNF paradoxically up-regulated enzymes that served to increase NAD(+) levels, such as IDO and PBEF, as well as enzymes that decrease NAD(+) levels, such as CD38 and CD157. The significance of these mRNA changes was evaluated by examining TNF-mediated changes in cellular NAD(+) levels. Treatment of macrophages with TNF decreased NAD(+) levels over time, suggesting that increases in NAD(+)-degrading enzymes were dominant. To evaluate whether this was the case, we measured TNF-mediated changes in NAD(+) levels in animals where CD38 was genetically deleted. In CD38-/- macrophages, the effects of TNF were reversed, with TNF increasing NAD(+) levels over time. The significance of our findings is threefold: (1) we establish that TNF affects NAD(+) metabolism by regulating the expression of major NAD(+) metabolic enzymes, (2) TNF-induced decreases in cellular NAD(+) levels were carried out through the upregulation of extracellularly situated enzymes, and (3) we provide a mechanism for the observed clinical connection of TNF-dependent diseases to tissue reductions in NAD(+) content. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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