| Literature DB >> 34943043 |
Noemi Rotllan1,2,3, Mercedes Camacho1,4, Mireia Tondo2,3,5, Elena M G Diarte-Añazco1, Marina Canyelles1,2,3, Karen Alejandra Méndez-Lara1, Sonia Benitez1, Núria Alonso3,6, Didac Mauricio3,7, Joan Carles Escolà-Gil1,2,3, Francisco Blanco-Vaca2,3,5, Josep Julve1,2,3.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death worldwide. Aging and/or metabolic stress directly impact the cardiovascular system. Over the last few years, the contributions of altered nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) metabolism to aging and other pathological conditions closely related to cardiovascular diseases have been intensively investigated. NAD+ bioavailability decreases with age and cardiometabolic conditions in several mammalian tissues. Compelling data suggest that declining tissue NAD+ is commonly related to mitochondrial dysfunction and might be considered as a therapeutic target. Thus, NAD+ replenishment by either genetic or natural dietary NAD+-increasing strategies has been recently demonstrated to be effective for improving the pathophysiology of cardiac and vascular health in different experimental models, as well as human health, to a lesser extent. Here, we review and discuss recent experimental evidence illustrating that increasing NAD+ bioavailability, particularly by the use of natural NAD+ precursors, may offer hope for new therapeutic strategies to prevent and treat cardiovascular diseases.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; aneurysm; animal models; atherosclerosis; cardiomyopathy; chemotherapy; clinical trials; diabetes; heart failure; ischemia/reperfusion; macrophage; mitochondria; myocarditis; niacin; niacinamide; niagen; niaspan; tryptophan; vitamin B3
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943043 PMCID: PMC8750485 DOI: 10.3390/antiox10121939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1NAD+ precursor metabolism and NAD+-consuming enzymes. Tryptophan, NA, NAM, and NR can be used by different pathways to obtain NAD+. NAD+ formation can be obtained de novo from tryptophan. The first step relies in the conversion of tryptophan to N-formylkynurenine by either indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) or tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase (TDO). N-formylkynurenine can be converted into quinolinic acid and NAD+ thereafter. NAD+ synthesis from NA is initiated by the NA phosphoribosyltransferase (NPRT), which uses phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) to form NAMN prior to NAD+ synthesis (Preiss-Handler pathway). Finally, the synthesis of NAD+ can be also possible using NAM or NR via the Salvage pathway. This pathway just needs 2 steps for each precursor. NAM is converted by the rate-limiting nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) to form NMN, also using PRPP as a co-substrate. NMN can be also formed by NR phosphorylation through the action of NR kinases (NRK1-2). Finally, the conversion of NMN to NAD+ is eventually catalyzed by cellular NMN adenylyl transferase (NMNAT1-3) enzymes. Abbreviations used were: 3HAO: 3-hydroxyanthranilate 3,4-dioxygenase; IDO: indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; KMO: kynureine monooxygenase; KYNU: kynureinase; NAD: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; NA: nicotinic acid; NAM: nicotinamide; NMN: nicotinamide mononucleotide; Nampt: nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase; Nnmat: nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase; NR: nicotinamide riboside; Nrk1/2: NR kinase 1, 2; Nmat: nicotinate mononucleotide adenyltransferase; Nprt: nicotinate phosphoribosyl-transferase; Nnmt: nicotinamide methyltransferase; TDO: tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase.
Figure 2Effect of NAM manipulation on antioxidant ex vivo protection conferred by plasma isolated HDL. (a) Representative diene formation curves of human LDL incubated with mouse HDL isolated from untreated and NAM-treated wildtype C57BL/6J mice in the presence of 2.5 μM CuSO4 at 37 °C. The final oxidation kinetics of the LDL+HDL mixture was shown after subtracting the kinetics of HDL incubated without LDL. (b) HDL antioxidant activity against LDL oxidative modification. Methods used can be found in greater detail in reference [84]. Data were expressed as relative lag phase to LDL oxidized in the presence of HDL isolated from Untreated mice (arbitrary unit = 1). Data were expressed as the median ± interquartile range (n = 4–5 independent pools per group). Differences between the mean values were determined using a nonparametric Mann–Whitney test. * indicates significant differences versus untreated mice (p < 0.05). Abbreviations used were NAM, NAM-treated mice using 1% NAM dissolved in tap water [85] (Julve et al., 2021, unpublished data).
In vivo evidence for NAD+-increasing strategies in different animal models of different cardiovascular pathologies.
| Form of Suppl. B3 | Animal Model | Dose and Route of Administration | Duration | Outcome | Reference |
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| NA | Dietary supplementation of NA (0.3% | 10 weeks | Reduced aortic atherosclerotic plaque area | [ | |
| NA | Dietary supplementation NA (0.5% | 27 weeks | Reduced atherosclerotic lesions within the innominate artery | [ | |
| NA | Dietary supplementation of NA (3% | 8 weeks | Reduced aortic cholesterol and whole atherosclerotic plaque area | [ | |
| NA | Dietary supplementation NA (0.5% | 14 weeks | No changes in aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ | |
| NA | Dietary supplementation NA (0.1% | 18 weeks | Reduced aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ | |
| NA and pentaerythritoltetran NA | Rabbit | Dietary supplementation of NA or pentaerythritoltetran NA (0.5% | 71 days | Only pentaerythritoltetran NA reduced the lipid infiltrated area of the aorta | [ |
| NA and pentaerythritoltetran NA | Rabbit | Dietary supplementation of NA or pentaerythritoltetran NA (0.5% | 81 days | Both drugs reduced the lipid infiltrated area of the aorta | [ |
| Pentaerythritoltetran NA | Rabbit | Dietary supplementation of pentaerythritoltetran NA (0.5% | 120 and 160 days | Reduced lipid infiltration in the aorta | [ |
| Pentaerythritoltetran NA | Rabbit | Dietary supplementation of pentaerythritoltetran NA (0.75% | 160 days | Reduced aortic cholesterol | [ |
| NA and Pentaerythritoltetran NA | Mini-pigs | Dietary supplementation of NA or pentaerythritoltetran NA (0.25–0.75% | 12–19 months | Reduced lipid infiltration in the aorta | [ |
| Me-NAM and NA | Double | Administration of me-NAM or NA (0.1 g/kg/day) in the drinking water together a regular chow diet | 4 weeks | Both drugs reduced aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ |
| NAM | Administration of NAM (0.25 and 1% | 4 weeks | Reduced aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ | |
| me-NAM | Dietary supplementation of me-NAM | 8 weeks | Reduced aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ | |
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| NAM | Sprague Dawley male rats treated with DOX (5 mg/kg, i.p.) once/week for four consecutive weeks | Oral dose of NAM (600 mg/kg by oral gavage). | 28 consecutive days | Amelioration of cardiotoxic serum cardiotoxicity indices, conduction and histopathological abnormalities | [ |
| NR | Male mice (aged 2 months) were injected with a single dose of DOX (20 mg/kg, i.p.) | 0, 100, 300, or 500 mg/kg (i.p.) given 30 min prior DOX injection | 5 days | Reduced cardiac injury and myocardial dysfunction | [ |
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| NAD+ | Male Wistar rats | 10–20 mg/kg intravenous (i.v) (approximately 85% reduction of the infarct at the dosage of 20 mg/kg) | A single dose immendiately before ischemia | Reduced the infarct size after ischemia/reperfusion | [ |
| NAD+ | C57BL/6 wild-type mice | i.p. administration of 0.2 g/kg NAD | 1 dose before myocardial injury | Reduced myocardial infarct size after ischemia/reperfusion | [ |
| NAD+ | Bama miniature pigs (a swine model of ischemia/reperfusion injury) | 20 mg/kg NAD+ or saline, i.v. | Before reperfusion | Dysinflammation, less cardiac fibrosis, and better ventricular compliance; | [ |
| NAD+ | Specific-pathogen-free male Sprague-Dawley rats | 10 mg/kg i.p. | 14 days | Attenuation the depression of cardiac function in the isolated rat hearts after ischemia-reperfusion | [ |
| NMN | C57BL/6 wild-type mice | administration of 0.5 g/kg i.p. | 30 min before ischemia and repetitive administration just before and during reperfusion | Reduced the infarct size after ischemia/reperfusion | [ |
| NR | Male Wistar rats | i.v. infusion of 50 mg/kg NR | NR infusion for 5 min before and 15 min after the beginning of reperfusion | Restoration of small intestine microcirculation after mesenteric ischaemia/reperfusion; improved small intestine mucosa damage. | [ |
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| NR soft pellets | Chow diet or NR-supplemented with 400 mg/Kg of body weight/day | 50 days | Protection against cardiac dysfunction (measure LVEF and FS, dilatation and thinning of the LV wall) | [ | |
| NR soft pellets or in water | Chow diet or NR-supplemented with 400 mg/kg of body weight/day | 16 days | Increased NAD+ content in liver and heart and partially restore the left ventricular function and increase survival | [ | |
| NR soft pellets or in water | For post-symptomatic treatment, LmnaH222P/H222P mice received 400 mg/kg per day orally by gavage | 9 weeks | Stable left ventricular dimensions and fractional shortening | [ | |
| NAM | Received 500 mg/kg i.p. | every other day during 9 weeks | Treatment with NAM is not efficient to restore the cardiac NAD+ content and cardiac function | [ | |
| NR | C57BL/6 CD or HFD+L-NAME (HFpEF mice model) | 400 mg/kg body weight/d | 5 day per week for 4 weeks | Improved mitochondrial function, ameliorates cardiac hypertrophy, attenuates diastolic dysfunction, improves exercise capacity, and reduces lung capacity | [ |
| NR medium and high dose | MutUNG1 mice and control littermates | CD, NR-supplemented with 400 mg/kg (medium dose) or 1,000 mg/kg (high dose) | 2 weeks | NR high dose: inhibits SIRT3 activity due to an enhance levels of NAM and promotes mitochondrial dysfunction. Reduction of NAD+ levels in cardiac tissue and loss of mitochondrial deacetylation | [ |
| NMN | Myh6-Cre:Klf4 fl/fl mice, designated CM-K4KO (C57BL/6J background) | 500 mg/kg/day i.p. | 5 days | NMN protected the mutant mice from pressure overload-induced HF | [ |
| NR | Mouse model of cardiac hypertrophy established using Transverse aortic constriction surgery (C57BL/6J background) | 400 mg/kg/day (daily oral gavage) | 8 weeks | NR alleviated from cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction | [ |
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| NR | Marfan Syndrome mouse model Fbn1c1039g/+ | i.p. injections 1,000 mg/kg every second day | 28 days | Elevation of TFAM levels, improvement of mitochondrial metabolism, and | [ |
| NA | Drinking water supplemented with NA 0.3% | 2 days prior AAA induction to the end of the study | Protection against AAA formation mediated through | [ | |
| Me-NAM | Dietary supplementation of me-NAM (0.0057 and 0.017% | 8 weeks | Reduced aortic root atherosclerotic area | [ | |
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| NA | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | NA dissolved in the drinking water (50 mg/kg/day) | 12 weeks | Ameliorated hypertension and partial reversal of upregulation of oxidative, inflammatory, and profibrotic mediators in the remnant kidney | [ |
| NAD+ | Incubation of NAD+ in whole aorta homogenates to measure SIRT1 deacetylase activity | 80 min | Improvement of vascular remodeling in the aortas of transgenic mice resulting in a decreased SBP | [ | |
| NADH | Spontaneously hypertensive male rats | 5 mg administered in single tablets daily | 60 days | Lower SPB in treated rats vs. non-treated ones | [ |
| β-NAD+ and NAM | Sea urchin egg | Incubation in the medium, | 90 min | vasorelaxation by inhibition of ADP ribosyl cyclase | [ |
| β-NAD+ | Male New Zeland white rabbit | Incubation in smooth muscle homogenates of pulmonary arteries | 60 min | Vasorelaxation by inhibition of ADP ribosyl cyclase | [ |
| NAM | Sprague-Dawley rats, wild-type C57BL/6 mice, and CD38/mice on a C57BL6 background | Injection of 6 mg/kg/min in the renal artery | 3 min before and 5 min following endothelin-1 or sarafotoxin-6c injection | Vasorelaxation by inhibition of ADP ribosyl cyclase | [ |
| NAM | Dahl salt-sensitive rats | 40 mM oral supplementation in the drinking water | 5 weeks | improved diastolic dysfunction | [ |
| NAM | RUPP mice | Daily oral gavage | In between 14.5 and 18.5 days postcoitus | Improving and preventing hypertension, fetal growth restriction, and premature birth | [ |
| NAM | 1-Non-pregnant female C57BL/6J | Daily oral gavage | In between 12.5 and 18.5 days postcoitus | Improving and preventing hypertension, proteinuria, miscarriage, and premature birth in preeclampsia | [ |
| NAM | 1-C57BL/6J male mice | NAM dissolved in the drinking water (500 mg/kg/day) | 60 days | Normalized blood pressure in mice with impaired eNOS function via suppressing inflammation | [ |
| NMN | C57BL/6J mice | i.p. injection of NMN (500 mg/kg) | twice a day during 7 consecutive days | Preservation of myocardial NAD+ levels and functional compensation against pressure overload | [ |
Current clinical trials of NAD+-increasing strategies to combat cardiovascular diseases.
| Interventions | Aimed Cardiovascular-Related Outcomes | Study Start Date | Finish Date | Time Frame | Dosage | NCT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NA | Change in the mean severity of proximal stenosis | Jan 1984 | Aug 1989 | 2.5 years | NA was started at 125 mg twice a day and gradually increased to 500 mg four times a day (with meals and at bedtime) at one month and 1 g four times a day at two months. If the LDL cholesterol level did not fall below 3.1 mmol per liter (120 mg per deciliter) after three months, the dose of niacin was increased to 1.5 g (three tablets) four times a day, but no further | NCT00000512 |
| NA | Change in minimal diameter of coronary artery lesions | Dec 1986 | Nov 1992 | Not available | Not available | NCT00000461 |
| NA | Change in proximal obstructive disease | Sep 1994 | Aug 1999 | 2.5 years | Not available | NCT00000553 |
| NA | Change in plaque morphology | Jan 2000 | Sep 2005 | 12 months | NA 20 mg daily | NCT00307307 |
| NA | Changes in carotid plaque composition | Jun 2001 | Apr 2019 | 40 months | NA 2000 mg daily | NCT00715273 |
| NA | Inflammation and clot formation and blood vessel health | Jun 2002 | Nov 2005 | 16 weeks | NA 1500 mg daily | NCT00590629 |
| NA | Endothelial function | Jun 2003 | Jun 2005 | 16 weeks | NA 1.5 g daily | NCT01921010 |
| NA | Changes in aortic and carotid plaque architecture and composition | Sep 2003 | Dec 2008 | 18 months | NA extended release 0.5 to 3.0 g daily | NCT00127218 |
| NA | Change in superficial femoral artery wall volume | Apr 2004 | Dec 2021 | 24 months | NA 1500 mg daily | NCT00687076 |
| NA | Brachial artery flow mediated dilation | Sep 2005 | Aug 2008 | 3 months | NA extended release 1500 mg daily | NCT00150722 |
| NA | Relative effect on flow-mediated dilatation of radial artery | Mar 2006 | Jun 2009 | 6 months | NA extended-release | NCT00298909 |
| NA | Endothelial function by high resolution echography in response to nitric agent | Jun 2007 | May 2009 | 3 months | Not available | NCT00855257 |
| NA | Mean plaque lipid composition in carotid arteries | Mar 2008 | Feb 2015 | 24 months | NA extended-release 1500 mg or 2000 mg daily | NCT01178320 |
| NA | Composite score of plaque inflammation/stability, plaque instability protein composite score, total cholesterol, and free cholesterol | Apr 2009 | Oct 2010 | 12 weeks | NA extended-release tablet 2 g daily | NCT00804843 |
| NA | Endothelial dependant dilatation of the arterial wall | Sep 2010 | Oct 2011 | 12 weeks | NA 2000 mg/40 mg | NCT01126073 |
| NA | Change in percent atheroma volume by intravascular ultrasonography | Oct 2010 | Nov 2015 | 12 months | NA extended release 1500–2000 mg daily | NCT01221402 |
| NA | Change from baseline in arterial fluorodeoxyglucose uptake | Mar 2012 | Jan 2013 | 12 weeks | NA titrated to 6000 mg daily | NCT02003638 |
| NA | Changes in protein or lipid composition of any lipoprotein fraction and changes in vascular compliance | Mar 2015 | Jun 2019 | 14 weeks | NA extended release 2000 mg/day | NCT02322203 |
| NAM | Number of participants with adverse events (early onset Preeclampsia) | Aug 2014 | Nov 2018 | 48 h | Either 500 mg or 1000 mg by mouth each morning until delivery or 14 days, whichever occurs first | NCT02213094 |
| NAM | NAD+ augmentation in cardiac surgery associated myocardial injury trial. | Feb 2021 | Sep 2021 | From baseline to three days after surgery | 3 g on the day of surgery and post-surgical days one and two | NCT04750616 |
| NR | Mean IL-1beta release From peripheral blood mononuclear cells during refeeding after 24 h fast | Jun 2016 | Aug 2018 | 4 weeks | Either NR at 1000 mg/day or placebo for one week, followed by a washout period of 2–3 weeks, then a crossover to placebo or NR at 1000 mg/day for one additional week. The end point was analyzed at end of each treatment. | NCT02812238 |
| NR | Bioavailability (pharmacokinetics), safety (blood pressure, pulse, etc.) and impact on mitochondrial disease symptoms * | Dec 2017 | Dec 2019 | 24 h (bioavailability and safety) and 4 weeks (mitochondrial characteristics) | not defined (open-label experimental medicine study; all subjects will receive the same dosage of the supplement) | NCT03432871 |
| NR | Number of participants without heart failure linked inflammation in patients with stable, systolic heart failure | Jun 2018 | Oct 2020 | 12 weeks | Starting at 500 mg daily (250 mg BID) be increased at two weekly intervals by 250 mg/dose (BID) (500 mg/day) to a final dose of 1000 mg PO BID (2000 mg/day) | NCT03565328 |
| NR | Incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events (safety and tolerability), whereby the main aim was to assess the preoperative effect of NR supplementation in patients undergoing elective left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation | Nov 2018 | Sep 2020 | Up to 14 days | Dose Escalation: | NCT03727646 |
| NR | Exploratory endpoint: effect of NR on left ventricular diastolic and systolic function | May 2019 | Jun 2019 | 12 weeks | The initial dose will be 1 capsule twice daily, followed by weekly up-titration by 1 capsule/dose to a final dose of 4 capsules (1000 mg) twice daily at the end of week 4; participants will be continued on the final dose up to the final follow up visit (week 12) | NCT03423342 |
| NR | Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (primary) and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (secondary) | Nov 2019 | Sep 2014 | 3 months | 500 mg by mouth twice | NCT04040959 |
| NR | Systolic blood pressure | May 2019 | Dec 2023 | 3 months | 500 mg of the vitamin B3-precursor, nicotinamide riboside (NIAGEN) twice per day (1000 mg per day total) | NCT03821623 |
| NR | Between-group comparisons of myocardial NAD(H) levels, myocardial mitochondrial morphology, myocardial mitochondrial respiratory function, myocardial protein acetylation, myocardial gene expression by RNA-seq and the myocardial epigenome by ATAC-seq, inflammatory markers in myocardium | Sep 2020 | Aug 2024 | Up to 14 days | Dose Escalation: | NCT04528004 |
| NR | Change in Systolic blood pressure (primary), and change in arterial stiffness (secondary) | Jul 2020 | May 2022 | 6 week | 1000 mg/day | NCT04112043 |
| NMN | Effect of NMN on flow mediated dilation and brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity | Jun 2021 | Jul 2022 | 2 months | NMN10,000 WRIGHT LIFE® + lifestyle modification | NCT04903210 |
| NR | Vasodilatory Reserve (Percent change in systemic vascular resistance at baseline vs. exhaustion) and Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire Overall Summary Score (Assess the impact of our interventions on quality of life) | Oct 2021 | Sep 2026 | 6 days | Potassium Nitrate (KNO3) 6 mmol three times daily + Propionyl-L-Carnitine (PLC) 1000 mg twice daily + NR 300 mg three times daily | NCT04913805 |
* studies were focused in mitochondrial diseases, including myopathies, in skeletal, not cardiac, muscle. Abbreviations were used: NAD: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; NA: nicotinic acid; NAM: nicotinamide; NMN: nicotinamide mononucleotide; NR: nicotinamide riboside; NCT, clinical trial identifier (ClinicalTrials.gov).