Abstract

In the last several years, NAD+ supplementation has emerged as an innovative and safe therapeutic strategy for a wide spectrum of disorders, including diabetes and neuropathy. However, critical questions remain as to how NAD+ and its precursors are taken up by cells, as well as the effects of long-lasting intracellular NAD+ (iNAD+) increases. Here, we investigated the kinetics of iNAD+ levels in different cell types challenged with prolonged exposure to extracellular NAD+ (eNAD+). Surprisingly, we found that after the initial increase, iNAD+ contents decreased back to control levels (iNAD+ resetting). Focusing our attention on HeLa cells, we found that oxygen and ATP consumption occurred with similar temporal kinetics after eNAD+ exposure. Using [3H]NAD+ and [14C]NAD+, we determined that NAD+ resetting was not due to increased dinucleotide extrusion but rather due to reduced uptake of cleaved NAD+ products. Indeed, eNAD+ exposure reduced the expression of the ecto-5′-nucleotidase CD73, the nicotinamide adenine mononucleotide transporter solute carrier family 12 member 8, and the nicotinamide riboside kinase. Interestingly, silencing the NAD+-sensor enzyme sirtuin 1 prevented eNAD+-dependent transcriptional repression of ecto-5′-nucleotidase, solute carrier family 12 member 8, and nicotinamide riboside kinase, as well as iNAD+ resetting. Our findings provide the first evidence for a sirtuin 1–mediated homeostatic response aimed at maintaining physiological iNAD+ levels in conditions of excess eNAD+ availability. These data may be of relevance for therapies designed to support the NAD+ metabolome via extracellular supplementation of the dinucleotide or its precursors.

Highlights

  • Large body of evidence shows that impairment of NAD+ availability, due to either reduced biosynthesis or increased consumption, promotes aging (3, 4), diabetes (5), obesity (6), and neurodegeneration (7)

  • We previously reported that iNAD+ contents increase upon a brief exposure of HeLa cells to eNAD+ and that this increase confers significant cytoprotection from apoptosis triggered by staurosporine, C2 ceramide, or N-methyl-N0nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (32)

  • To rule out that this finding was specific for HeLa cells, we evaluated the effects of eNAD+ over time in SHSY-5Y, HT29, and renal proximal tubule epithelial cells and found similar kinetics of iNAD+ contents upon NAD+ exposure (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

RESEARCH ARTICLE

SIRT1-dependent restoration of NAD+ homeostasis after increased extracellular NAD+ exposure. Daniela Buonvicino1,*, Giuseppe Ranieri, Maria Pittelli, Andrea Lapucci, Stefania Bragliola, and Alberto Chiarugi From the 1Department of Health Sciences, Section of Clinical Pharmacology and Oncology, University of Florence, Florence, Italy; and 2Corporate Pre-Clinical R&D, Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A., Parma, Italy

Edited by John Denu
Results
Discussion
Cell culture
Oxygen consumption analysis
RNA isolation and qPCR
Bioinformatic analyses

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