Abstract

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) represents an essential cofactor in sustaining cellular bioenergetics and maintaining cellular fitness, and has emerged as a therapeutic target to counteract aging and age-related diseases. Besides NAD+ involvement in multiple redox reactions, it is also required as co-substrate for the activity of Sirtuins, a family of evolutionary conserved NAD+-dependent deacetylases that regulate both metabolism and aging. The founding member of this family is Sir2 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a well-established model system for studying aging of post-mitotic mammalian cells. In this context, it refers to chronological aging, in which the chronological lifespan (CLS) is measured. In this paper, we investigated the effects of changes in the cellular content of NAD+ on CLS by altering the expression of mitochondrial NAD+ carriers, namely Ndt1 and Ndt2. We found that the deletion or overexpression of these carriers alters the intracellular levels of NAD+ with opposite outcomes on CLS. In particular, lack of both carriers decreases NAD+ content and extends CLS, whereas NDT1 overexpression increases NAD+ content and reduces CLS. This correlates with opposite cytosolic and mitochondrial metabolic assets shown by the two types of mutants. In the former, an increase in the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation is observed together with an enhancement of a pro-longevity anabolic metabolism toward gluconeogenesis and trehalose storage. On the contrary, NDT1 overexpression brings about on the one hand, a decrease in the respiratory efficiency generating harmful superoxide anions, and on the other, a decrease in gluconeogenesis and trehalose stores: all this is reflected into a time-dependent loss of mitochondrial functionality during chronological aging.

Highlights

  • Significant progress has been made in elucidating fundamental processes such as human aging/ longevity as a result of studies performed in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Due to the importance of NAD+ homeostasis in the aging process from yeast to humans (Baccolo et al, 2018; Rajman et al, 2018; Yaku et al, 2018), we wished to test whether changes in the cellular content of this dinucleotide would cause any effects on chronological lifespan (CLS)

  • To this end we chose to use the ndt1 ndt2 and NDT1-over mutant strains: the former lacking the two mitochondrial NAD+ carriers, Ndt1 and Ndt2, identified so far and the latter overexpressing Ndt1, which is the main isoform of the carrier (Todisco et al, 2006; Agrimi et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Significant progress has been made in elucidating fundamental processes such as human aging/ longevity as a result of studies performed in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. On ethanol the ndt1 ndt2 mutant displayed a lower cellular and mitochondrial NAD+ content and a decrease in the growth rate (Agrimi et al, 2011).

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