| Literature DB >> 35474295 |
Bing Liang1, Xin-Lin Liu1, Yang Yuan1, Wen-Jing Liu1, Bing-Huan Huang1, Shan-Bo Yang1, Yuan-Zhen Gao1, Jing-Sen Meng1, Meng-Jiao Li1, Ting Ye1, Chuan-Zhi Wang1, Xiao-Kun Hu2, Dong-Ming Xing3,4.
Abstract
Heart aging is the main susceptible factor to coronary heart disease and significantly increases the risk of heart failure, especially when the aging heart is suffering from ischemia-reperfusion injury. Numerous studies with NAD+ supplementations have suggested its use in anti-aging treatment. However, systematic reviews regarding the overall role of NAD+ in cardiac aging are scarce. The relationship between NAD+ signaling and heart aging has yet to be clarified. This review comprehensively summarizes the current studies on the role of NAD+ signaling in delaying heart aging from the following aspects: the influence of NAD+ supplementations on the aging heart; the relationship and cross-talks between NAD+ signaling and other cardiac aging-related signaling pathways; Importantly, the therapeutic potential of targeting NAD+ in delaying heart aging will be discussed. In brief, NAD+ plays a vital role in delaying heart aging. However, the abnormalities such as altered glucose and lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, and calcium overload could also interfere with NAD+ function in the heart. Therefore, the specific physiopathology of the aging heart should be considered before applying NAD+ supplementations. We believe that this article will help augment our understanding of heart aging mechanisms. In the meantime, it provides invaluable insights into possible therapeutic strategies for preventing age-related heart diseases in clinical settings.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35474295 PMCID: PMC9042931 DOI: 10.1038/s41420-022-01031-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Discov ISSN: 2058-7716
Fig. 1Relationship between NAD+ deficiency and heart aging.
The lack of NAD+ in the aging heart could play a crucial role in causing various changes in different cellular pathways involved in cardiac damage. The outcomes of NAD+ deficiency include decreased heart function and increased ventricular dilation risks in inflammation and stress, all of which are well known to speed up the process of heart aging.
Fig. 2Schematic diagram illustrating intracellular pathways of NAD+ synthesis, NAD+ metabolism, and NAD+ signaling pathway in mitochondria.
NAD+ can be synthesized from multiple precursors, including Trp, NA, NAM, NMN, NAR, and NR. NAD+ mainly exerts biological functions in mitochondria via regulating mitochondria membrane transporter SLC25A51 (MCART1 in the heart), affecting the transport of metabolic substrates, ATP, and ions. Sirtuins and PARP are the main NAD+ consumers.
Fig. 3Schematic diagram showing the cross-talks between NAD+ and intracellular pathways in mitochondria and nucleus.
In cardiomyocytes, NAD+ regulates a variety of nuclear transcription regulatory proteins such as Sirts, FOXOs, and STATs through its induction of deacetylation. Its extensive regulatory capacity is not limited to the cytoplasm but also in mitochondria and inflammasomes. The initial factor may be related to AMPK and ROS signaling.
Fig. 4Protein–protein interaction networks between NAD+ and associated regulatory proteins implicated in heart aging.
The presented network is drawn by the JAVA-based platform Cytoscape 3.8.2 (http://cytoscape.org): the protein-protein interaction (PPI) data were merged by multiple databases of Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), Wiki pathway, NDEx, PSICQUIC, and String. At first, the data covering the overlap part of cardiac hypertrophy and aging pathway were collected, which were then merged with the NAD+-related pathway. The disconnected nodes have been removed. The blue nodes and lines indicate direct upstream factors of NAD+. The red nodes and lines indicate the direct outcome of NAD+. NAD+, placed in the center of the network, is associated with several regulatory proteins, especially the Sirtuins, FOXOs, and STATs families, and the oxidative stress-related pathways implicated in heart aging.
Fig. 5NAD+ associated mitochondrial protection in the aging heart.
The presented figure showed that NAD+ relates two aspects of protection. The inhibitory role of NAD+ is involved in mitochondrial permeability, oxidative stress, calcium homeostasis, mitochondrial dynamics of fission, pre-apoptosis of BH-3 only domain protein, NLRP3-induced inflammations, and autophagic exhaustion. They are suppressed by AKT, FOXOs, CD38, Sirt1, Bcl-2, respectively. The assisting role of NAD+ is involved in Nrf1-induced selective mitophagy, Hsp90-mediated selective autophagy, Sirt3/Nrf2-mediated mitochondrial biogenesis, PINK1-induced fusion process, PGC-1-1α-dependent mitochondrial DNA repair, and NAD+ itself- dependent OXPHOS.
NAD+ is involved in the mechanistic pathways underlying the cardioprotective effects of different interventions to cardiac dysfunction.
| Intervention | Approach | Change in NAD+ | Outcome | Benefits of NAD+? | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AngII | I/R in aged Wistar rats | NAD+/NADH increased by about 7.4% | AngII inhibits mPTP and cardiolipin Peroxidation opening, which exerted a noticeable cardioprotective effect on old rats. | Yes | [ |
| Sevoflurane | I/R in aged SD rats | An increase of about 153.46% | The Sevoflurane-mediated cardio-protection in young rats was not effective in aging rats, which may result from failure to activate Akt and ERK1/2 and failure to inhibit mPTP opening. | N/A | [ |
| NMN | Wild type C57BL/6N old mice | An increase of about 29.66% | NMN effectively reduced age-related physiological decline in mice. | Yes | [ |
| isoflurane | I/R in Fischer-344 rats | An increase of about 103.51% | Isoflurane pretreatment inhibited the opening of mPTP. The I/R damage to the mitochondria of young mice was improved in all aspects of morphological characteristics. But no effect on aged mice. | N/A | [ |
| CD38 inhibitor: 78C | Aged C57BL/6 mice | An increase of about 38.46% | 78C treatment decreased ejection fraction and fractional shortening rate; improved systolic left ventricular volume and isovolumic contraction, and restored NAD+ in aged myocardium to the level of young mice | Yes | [ |
| NAMPT blocker FK866 | Cardiomyocytes of neonatal SD rats | Reduced by about 70% | Fk866 reduced NAD+ level by inhibiting NAMPT activity and impaired mitochondrial metabolism and adaptive response of cardiomyocytes to norepinephrine, hydrogen peroxide, and insulin. | Yes | [ |
| NAR+ FK866 | CIPN model | An increase of about 500% | NRK1/NRK2 phosphorylation produced NAMN, which further promoted NAD+ synthesis. | N/A | [ |
| exercise | HFD model of w1118 Drosophila | An increase of about 25.16% | Exercise training reduced lipid accumulation, enhanced cardiac function, activated the NAD+/dSIR2/PGC-1α pathway, and reduced the risk of arrhythmia, thereby improving lipotoxic cardiomyopathy induced by cardiac dsir 2-RNAi. | Yes | [ |
| Agomelatine | I/R in Wistar rats | An increase of about 36.76% | Agomelatine inhibited the opening of mPTP, significantly improved cardiac function, reduced the pathological changes of ischemic myocardium, and reduced the area of myocardial infarction. | Yes | [ |
| DAPH | Wistar rats | Reduced by about 56% | DAHP accelerated cell senescence and inhibited GTPCH1, and reduced the level of NAD+ | Yes | [ |
| Tilianin | I/R in aged SD rats | An increase of about 79.14% | Tilianin regulates the AMPK / SIRT1 / PGC-1a signaling pathway, which can significantly reduce myocardial infarction, improve the histopathological morphology of ischemia-reperfusion myocardium, and reduce oxidative stress injury regulates energy metabolism disorder. | Yes | [ |
| PARP inhibitor: 3-AB | Sepsis model of cecal ligation and perforation in SD rats | An increase of about 91.3% | 3AB reduced myocardial cell mitochondrial cristae breakage and myofibril breakage, which indicated that 3AB plays a protective role in edema or structural disorders and inhibits PARP activation. | Yes | [ |
| Nigella sativa | I/R in Wistar rats | An increase of about 168.18% | Inhibiting the opening of MPTP can significantly restore cardiac function after ischemia-reperfusion. | Yes | [ |
| NR | Healthy human | An increase of about 173.59% | Inhibition of mitochondrial dysfunction with elevated NAD+ level in the blood. | Yes | [ |
The majority demonstrated the benefit of increasing NAD+ in the aging heart.