| Literature DB >> 32365524 |
Eun Seong Hwang1, Seon Beom Song1.
Abstract
Nicotinamide (NAM) at doses far above those recommended for vitamins is suggested to be effective against a wide spectrum of diseases and conditions, including neurological dysfunctions, depression and other psychological disorders, and inflammatory diseases. Recent increases in public awareness on possible pro-longevity effects of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) precursors have caused further growth of NAM consumption not only for clinical treatments, but also as a dietary supplement, raising concerns on the safety of its long-term use. However, possible adverse effects and their mechanisms are poorly understood. High-level NAM administration can exert negative effects through multiple routes. For example, NAM by itself inhibits poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs), which protect genome integrity. Elevation of the NAD+ pool alters cellular energy metabolism. Meanwhile, high-level NAM alters cellular methyl metabolism and affects methylation of DNA and proteins, leading to changes in cellular transcriptome and proteome. Also, methyl metabolites of NAM, namely methylnicotinamide, are predicted to play roles in certain diseases and conditions. In this review, a collective literature search was performed to provide a comprehensive list of possible adverse effects of NAM and to provide understanding of their underlying mechanisms and assessment of the raised safety concerns. Our review assures safety in current usage level of NAM, but also finds potential risks for epigenetic alterations associated with chronic use of NAM at high doses. It also suggests directions of the future studies to ensure safer application of NAM.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; NAD+; PARP; SIRT1; SIRT3; adverse effect; methylnicotinamide; mitochondria; nicotinamide; reactive oxygen species
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32365524 PMCID: PMC7277745 DOI: 10.3390/biom10050687
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Summary of beneficial effects of high doses of nicotinamide (NAM).
| Effects | Examples of Effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| Protection against ATP depletion | [ | |
| Decreased AD pathology and cognitive decline | [ | |
| Improved sensory and motor neurological behavior | [ | |
| Increased recovery from bilateral frontal brain injury | [ | |
| Neuroprotection | Prevention/delay of ischemic stroke in stroke-prone hypertensive rats | [ |
| Reduced lateral geniculate nucleus neuronal death | [ | |
| Attenuated hippocampal neuronal death after global ischemia | [ | |
| Improved motor deficits associated with Huntington’s disease phenotype | [ | |
| Increased NAD+ level and mitochondrial function | [ | |
| Amelioration of depression and psychological disorders | Amelioration of depression | [ |
| Increased social interaction | [ | |
| Anti-inflammation | Attenuated neutrophil recruitment in carrageenan-induced pleurisy or in lesions of autoimmune disease | [ |
| Reduced arthritis activity | [ | |
| Protection against | Attenuated retinal pigment cell death and age-related macular degeneration in animals | [ |
| Reduced incidence of optic nerve degeneration and glaucoma | [ | |
| Immune modulation | Improved mouse survival after lethal Staphylococcus enterotoxin B challenge | [ |
| Skin protection/anti- | Downregulation of the expression of inflammatory cytokines and protection against UV light | [ |
| Anti-fibrosis | Attenuated development of pulmonary fibrosis | [ |
| Anti-metastasis and | Decreased growth and progression of bladder tumors | [ |
| Photo-protection and reduced incidence of skin cancers | [ | |
| Anti-HIV and -AIDS | Decreased provirus integration | [ |
| Decreased viral RNA expression | [ |
Positive and negative effects of NAM shown in human studies 1.
| Affected Organs and Conditions 2 | Observed Effects | Dose and Duration | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Joints | Reduced itching in uremic patients | 550 mg twice a day | [ |
| pancreatic β-cell | β-cell function preserved and improved | 25 mg/kg daily intake | [ |
| Reduced the rate of diabetes incidence | 500 mg twice per day | [ | |
| No effect on the incidence of being diabetes-free | 1200 mg daily intake | [ | |
| Ineffective in prevention or delaying clinical onset of diabetes | 1.2 g daily intake | [ | |
| Skin | Reduced acne lesions and severity | 4% gel | [ |
| Attenuated immunosuppression with alterations in metabolism and apoptosis | 5% lotion applied before UV exposure | [ | |
| Psychology | Improvements against depression | 0.5–1.5 g daily intake | [ |
| Relief from anxiety | A dose of 2 ug | [ | |
| Kidney | Lowered serum concentrations of phosphorus, parathyroid hormone, and LDL, and increased serum HDL | 500 mg/day (with and increment every 2 weeks) | [ |
| Skin cancers non-melanoma | Reduced incidence of various types of skin cancers and actinic keratoses | 500 mg twice daily | [ |
|
| |||
| Minor effects | Frontal dull headaches, nausea, headache, dizziness | 1–18 g | [ |
| Pancreatic β-cell/plasma | Decreased insulin sensitivity, increased oxidative stress (H2O2) | 2 g daily | [ |
| Liver | Parenchymal-cell injury, portal fibrosis and cholestasis, liver injury | 3, 9 g daily | [ |
| Lymphocytes, platelets | Uremic toxicity-related cancer and thrombocytopenia | 1300, 1500 mg daily | [ |
| Kidney/platelets | Decreased serum phosphorus and thrombocytopenia | 0.52–2 g daily | [ |
1 Some examples of human studies are presented. For more information on the beneficiary effects, check Reference [27]. 2 In all human applications except for skin, NAM was administered through dietary intake.
Figure 1A schematic representation of routes of metabolism and beneficiary effects of NAM. In cells (grey-lined box), NAM is converted to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) mainly through salvage pathways via nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN). NAD+ is reduced to become NADH and thereby, establishes NAD+ redox, through which NAM treatment affects mitochondrial energetics and ROS generation. NAD+ is also broken down to NAM and ADP-ribose by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs), sirtuins, and a family of ADP-ribose transferases (ARTs), to which NAM exerts feedback inhibition. Among these, inhibition of PARPs constitutes an important route of anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidative, and pro-cell survival effects. Increased level of NAD+ activates sirtuin proteins such as SIRT1 and SIRT3, which exert a variety of cell-beneficiary effects such as anti-oxidation, genome stability, autophagy, and lipid metabolism. In addition, they together maintain mitochondria quality and integrity, and thereby, keep reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation at low level. Through these, NAM may exert effects against aging-associated degeneration and diseases, and renal and inflammatory diseases. Through these effects, NAM may help protecting neurons and pancreatic β-cells. Meanwhile, a minor portion of cellular NAD+ pool is provided through de novo synthesis from tryptophan, which is also a source for serotonin. Therefore, NAM supplement helps maintaining serotonin level, and thereby alleviates depression and psychological disorders. NAD+ level is also elevated through supplementation of nicotinamide riboside (NR) and nicotinic acid (NA).
Examples of adverse effects of high dose NAM reported in studies of cells and animals.
| Subjects | Examples of Effects | Dose | Duration | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Death of mouse embryonic stem cells | 20 mM | 3–4 days | [ | |
| Tumorigenicity. DNA damage, and sister chromatid exchanges | 1–10 mM | 3 h | [ | |
| Cells | 25 mM | 48 h | [ | |
| Decreased SIRT1 activity. Increased intracellular ROS, spindle defects, and mitochondria dysfunction | 5 mM | 6, 12, 24 h | [ | |
| Blocked mitochondria-related transcription. Worsened motor disturbance in Huntington’s disease model | 0.5, 1 mM | 96 h | [ | |
| Mice and Rats | Oxidative DNA damage in hepatic and renal tissues. Impaired glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity | 1 or 4 g/kg, d.w. | 8 weeks | [ |
| Increased lethality | 4.5 g/kg, d.w., | 40 days | [ | |
| Occurrence of pancreatic islet cell tumor | 350 mg/kg, i.p. | 226 days | [ | |
| Increased incidence of kidney tumors | 350 mg/kg, i.p. | until die | [ | |
| Decreased growth rate | 1, 2 %, d.w. | 24 days | [ | |
| Growth inhibition, methyl deficiency, reduced tissue choline level, and increased hepatic lipids | 6, 20, 60 mg/100 g bw, i.p. | 2, 5 weeks | [ | |
| Amelioration of acetaminophen-induced biochemical changes but occurrence of hepatotoxicity in healthy animals | 500 mg/kg, i.p. | 1.5 h | [ | |
| Development of hepatic steatosis and fibrosis | 1%, d.w. | 6 weeks, | [ | |
| Neurodegeneration of dopaminergic neurons | 500 mg/kg, i.p. | 28 days | [ | |
| Blocked mitochondrial-related transcription, worsened motor phenotype | 250mg/kg/day, s.c. | 28 days | [ |
i.p., intraperitoneal injection; d.w., drinking water; and s.c., subcutaneous injection.
Figure 2Routes of possible adverse effects of high doses of NAM. High-level NAM has been proposed to induce disorders through multiple different routes. First, NAM inhibits PARP proteins, thereby inducing anti-inflammatory effects but also causing genome instability, which may lead to carcinogenesis. Second, methylation of large amounts of NAM can lower the cellular methyl pool. This leads to reduced methylation of DNA and proteins, thereby changing patterns of gene expression and protein activity. This is proposed to be etiologically linked to liver steatosis and fibrosis. Meanwhile, NAM methylation yields metNAM, which, by inducing high level ROS generation and subsequent dysfunction of mitochondria, may cause development of insulin resistance, coronary artery disease (CAD), and Parkinson’s disease (PD). However, it is not clear whether metNAM-induced ROS generation is harmful. MetNAM is further metabolized to N-methyl-2-pyridone-5-carboxamide (2-PY), whose elevated blood levels can be toxic to patients with chronic renal problems. Meanwhile, increase in the methylation cycle by high-level NAM would lead to an increase in the level of homocysteine, which, by upregulating interleukin-6 (IL-6) expression and inducing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, may trigger insulin resistance and CAD. However, most of these proposed links between high-level NAM and the conditions are poorly supported by experimental evidence.