NAD+review2016

The human NAD metabolome: Functions, metabolism and compartmentalization.

Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology

confidence

Key findings

Review of NAD metabolism, functions, and compartmentalization; no clinical or biological endpoints reported.

View source on PubMed (PMID 25837229) ↗

Sample size
N/A
Population
Humans (review)
Dosing
N/A
Duration
N/A
Route
N/A
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
not_reported
Drug class
coenzyme
Full abstract

The metabolism of NAD has emerged as a key regulator of cellular and organismal homeostasis. Being a major component of both bioenergetic and signaling pathways, the molecule is ideally suited to regulate metabolism and major cellular events. In humans, NAD is synthesized from vitamin B3 precursors, most prominently from nicotinamide, which is the degradation product of all NAD-dependent signaling reactions. The scope of NAD-mediated regulatory processes is wide including enzyme regulation, control of gene expression and health span, DNA repair, cell cycle regulation and calcium signaling. In these processes, nicotinamide is cleaved from NAD(+) and the remaining ADP-ribosyl moiety used to modify proteins (deacetylation by sirtuins or ADP-ribosylation) or to generate calcium-mobilizing agents such as cyclic ADP-ribose. This review will also emphasize the role of the intermediates in the NAD metabolome, their intra- and extra-cellular conversions and potential contributions to subcellular compartmentalization of NAD pools.

Research information, not medical advice. StudyKit summarizes published studies to help you understand your protocol. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace a clinician. Talk to a qualified provider before changing anything you take.