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NAD+ and NADH in cellular functions and cell death
Front Biosci. 2006 Sep 1;11:3129-48.
NAD+ and NADH in cellular functions and cell death. Ying W. Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA 94121, USA. Weihai.Ying@@@@ucsf.edu Increasing evidence has indicated that NAD+ and NADH play critical roles not only in energy metabolism, but also in cell death and various cellular functions including regulation of calcium homeostasis and gene expression. It has also been indicated that NAD+ and NADH are mediators of multiple major biological processes including aging. NAD+ and NADH produce the biological effects by regulating numerous NAD+/ NADH-dependent enzymes, including dehydrogenases, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases, Sir2 family proteins (sirtuins), mono(ADP- ribosyl)transferases, and ADP-ribosyl cyclases. Of particular interest, NAD+-dependent generation of ADP-ribose, cyclic ADP-ribose and O-acetyl-ADP-ribose can mediate calcium homeostasis by affecting TRPM2 receptors and ryanodine receptors; and sirtuins and PARPs appear to play key roles in aging, cell death and a variety of cellular functions. It has also been indicated that NADH and NAD+ can be transported across plasma membranes of cells, and that extracellular NAD+ may be a new signaling molecule. Our latest studies have shown that intranasal NAD+ administration can profoundly decrease ischemic brain damage. These new pieces of information have fundamentally changed our understanding about NAD+ and NADH, suggesting novel paradigms about the metabolism and biological activities of NAD+ and NADH. Based on this information, it is tempted to hypothesize that NAD + and NADH, together with ATP and Ca2+, may be four most fundamental components in life, which can significantly affect nearly all major biological processes. Future studies on NAD+ and NADH may not only elucidate some fundamental mysteries in biology, but also provide novel insights for interfering aging and many disease processes. PMID: 16720381 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] |
Nad
NADH is available as a supplement, believe it or not. (A good thing.) The brand that first appeared, as I recall it, is Enada.
There is an assortment available, on-line, here: www.iherb.com/ProductsList.aspx?c=1&cid=197 - but there must be lots of other sources too. |
Has NADH supplement a role in PD treatment?
Quote:
Do you see a role for NADH in PD treatment? There are claims from some commercial websites that it is beneficial for PD. Thank you. Imad |
Complex 1
Hi Imad, several years ago my husband did take an NADH preparation. I no longer remember why we stopped it. The reasoning for starting it was that it is an important part of complex 1 of the electron transport chain, and thus mitochondrial function. I think my husband's use was prompted by information that dysfunction of complex 1 was operant in PD. He could never discern a difference if he took the supplement or not. A very dated article about adult mitochondrial cytopathy has a listing of vitamins and supplements recommended; Dr. Cohen recommends niacinamide which is a precursor to NADH. Literature written by Cohen guided us during the first years we were attempting to impact PD
http://www.emdn-mitonet.co.uk/PDF/CO...MitoAdults.pdf there has been more recent info on NADH, thou I do not keep up with it any longer. Madelyn |
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