google-site-verification=iUxCUgpoCQNGCS2CQuHi1L8aGqyfkykwcZUHtbSwrts NAMPT-Mediated NAD+ Biosynthesis Is Essential for Vision In Mice
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NAMPT-Mediated NAD+ Biosynthesis Is Essential for Vision In Mice

Cell Reports

September 27, 2016

Lin, Jonathan B.

Summary

Photoreceptor death is the endpoint of many blinding diseases. Identifying unifying pathogenic mechanisms in these diseases may offer global approaches for facilitating photoreceptor survival. We found that rod or cone photoreceptor-specific deletion of nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (Nampt), the rate-limiting enzyme in the major NAD+ biosynthetic pathway beginning with nicotinamide, caused retinal degeneration. In both cases, we could rescue vision with nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN). Significantly, retinal NAD+ deficiency was an early feature of multiple mouse models of retinal dysfunction, including light-induced degeneration, streptozotocin-induced diabetic retinopathy, and age-associated dysfunction. Mechanistically, NAD+ deficiency caused metabolic dysfunction and consequent photoreceptor death. We further demonstrate that the NAD+-dependent mitochondrial deacylases SIRT3 and SIRT5 play important roles in retinal homeostasis and that NAD+ deficiency causes SIRT3 dysfunction. These findings demonstrate that NAD+ biosynthesis is essential for vision, provide a foundation for future work to further clarify the mechanisms involved, and identify a unifying therapeutic target for diverse blinding diseases....Our results suggest that NAD+ biosynthesis may be important...in a broad spectrum of retinal degenerations and age-associated retinal dysfunction, opening up the possibility of using NAD+ intermediates to protect against retinal degeneration...If successful, this therapeutic strategy would be far-reaching, since it could be used for diverse retinal degenerations regardless of their etiology.

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