melihtas
Established Member
I don't think so. I cannot see how it would 'restore energy production'. It might reduce energy 'wastage' via CD38 but I very much doubt there is any significant 'wastage'. CD38 isn't just there to waste precious NAD. CD38 is involved in cells becoming more active rather than less as I understand it.
I think AI might be onto something this time.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4911708/
CD38 dictates age-related NAD decline and mitochondrial dysfunction through a SIRT3-dependent mechanism
Juliana Camacho-Pereira a,b, Mariana G Tarragó a, Claudia CS Chini a, Veronica Nin a, Carlos Escande a, Gina M Warner a, Amrutesh S Puranik a, Renee A Schoon c, Joel M Reid c, Antonio Galina b, Eduardo N Chini a,1
PMCID: PMC4911708 NIHMSID: NIHMS790132 PMID: 27304511
Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (NAD) levels decrease during aging, and are involved in age-related metabolic decline. To date, the mechanism responsible for the age-related reduction in NAD has not been elucidated. Here we demonstrate that expression and activity of the NADase CD38 increase with aging and that CD38 is required for the age-related NAD decline and mitochondrial dysfunction via a pathway mediated at least in part by regulation of SIRT3 activity. We also identified CD38 as the main enzyme involved in the degradation of the NAD precursor nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) in vivo, indicating that CD38 has a key role in the modulation of NAD-replacement therapy for aging and metabolic diseases.
Keywords: CD38, NAD+, mitochondrial function, glucose intolerance, aging
CD38/NADase increases during aging, and causes NAD decline and subsequent mitochondrial dysfunction.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2883294/
CD38 as a Regulator of Cellular NAD: A Novel Potential Pharmacological Target for Metabolic Conditions
Eduardo Nunes Chini 1,*
- Author information
- Copyright and License information
PMCID: PMC2883294 NIHMSID: NIHMS193403 PMID: 19149603
The publisher's version of this article is available at Curr Pharm Des
CD38 is a multifunctional enzyme that uses nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) as a substrate to generate second messengers. Recently, CD38 was also identified as one of the main cellular NADases in mammalian tissues and appears to regulate cellular levels of NAD in multiple tissues and cells. Due to the emerging role of NAD as a key molecule in multiple signaling pathways, and metabolic conditions it is imperative to determine the cellular mechanisms that regulate the synthesis and degradation of this nucleotide. In fact, recently it has been shown that NAD participates in multiple physiological processes such as insulin secretion, control of energy metabolism, neuronal and cardiac cell survival, airway constriction, asthma, aging and longevity. The discovery of CD38 as the main cellular NADase in mammalian tissues, and the characterization of its role on the control of cellular NAD levels indicate that CD38 may serve as a pharmacological target for multiple conditions.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00391
Discovery of a First-in-Class CD38 Inhibitor for the Treatment of Mitochondrial Myopathy
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00391#
- Yue Li
- Yuanyuan Liu
- Yong Zhang
- Yong Wu
- Zili Xing
- JianFei Wang*
- Guo-Huang Fan*
Abstract
![]()
CD38 is a crucial NADase in mammalian tissues that degrades NAD+ and thus regulates cellular NAD+ levels. Abnormal CD38 expression is linked to mitochondrial dysfunction under several pathological conditions. We present a novel CD38 inhibitor, compound 1, with high potency for CD38 (IC50 of 11 nM) and minimal activity against other targets. In a Pus1 knockout (Pus1–/–) mouse model of mitochondrial myopathy, compound 1 treatment rescued the decline in running endurance in a dose-dependent manner, associated with an elevated NAD+ level in muscle tissue, increased expression of Nrf2, which is known to promote mitochondrial biogenesis, and reduced lactate production. RNA sequencing data indicated that compound 1 has a great effect on mitochondrial function, metabolic processes, muscle contraction/development, and actin filament organization via regulating the expression of relevant genes. Compound 1 is a promising candidate for its excellent in vivo efficacy, favorable pharmacokinetics, and attractive safety profile.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1550413118301943
A Potent and Specific CD38 Inhibitor Ameliorates Age-Related Metabolic Dysfunction by Reversing Tissue NAD+ Decline
Author links open overlay panelMariana G. Tarragó 1 7, Claudia C.S. Chini 1 7, Karina S. Kanamori 1, Gina M. Warner 1, Ariel Caride 1, Guilherme C. de Oliveira 1, Micaela Rud 1, Adrienne Samani 2, Kyaw Z. Hein 1, Runqing Huang 3, Diana Jurk 4, Dong Seong Cho 2, James J. Boslett 5, Jordan D. Miller 3, Jay L. Zweier 5, João F. Passos 4, Jason D. Doles 2, David J. Becherer 6, Eduardo N. Chini 1 8
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2018.03.016Get rights and content
Highlights
- •
Highly potent and specific CD38 inhibitor, 78c, prevents age-related NAD+ decline- •
Treatment of old mice with 78c improved physiological and metabolic parameters- •
Inhibition of CD38 promotes an increase in NAD+ and its precursors in tissue- •
78c is a novel NAD+-boosting therapy to prevent age-related NAD+ declineSummary
Aging is characterized by the development of metabolic dysfunction and frailty. Recent studies show that a reduction in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is a key factor for the development of age-associated metabolic decline. We recently demonstrated that the NADase CD38 has a central role in age-related NAD+ decline. Here we show that a highly potent and specific thiazoloquin(az)olin(on)e CD38 inhibitor, 78c, reverses age-related NAD+ decline and improves several physiological and metabolic parameters of aging, including glucose tolerance, muscle function, exercise capacity, and cardiac function in mouse models of natural and accelerated aging. The physiological effects of 78c depend on tissue NAD+ levels and were reversed by inhibition of NAD+ synthesis. 78c increased NAD+ levels, resulting in activation of pro-longevity and health span-related factors, including sirtuins, AMPK, and PARPs. Furthermore, in animals treated with 78c we observed inhibition of pathways that negatively affect health span, such as mTOR-S6K and ERK, and attenuation of telomere-associated DNA damage, a marker of cellular aging. Together, our results detail a novel pharmacological strategy for prevention and/or reversal of age-related NAD+ decline and subsequent metabolic dysfunction.
