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Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide is transported into mammalian mitochondria.

Citation
Davila, A., et al. “Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Is Transported Into Mammalian Mitochondria.”. Elife.
Center University of Pennsylvania
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Author Antonio Davila, Ling Liu, Karthikeyani Chellappa, Philip Redpath, Eiko Nakamaru-Ogiso, Lauren M Paolella, Zhigang Zhang, Marie E Migaud, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Joseph A Baur
Keywords NAD, NADH, Cell Biology, mitochondria, mononucleotide, mouse, niacin, nicotinamide
Abstract

Mitochondrial NAD levels influence fuel selection, circadian rhythms, and cell survival under stress. It has alternately been argued that NAD in mammalian mitochondria arises from import of cytosolic nicotinamide (NAM), nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN), or NAD itself. We provide evidence that murine and human mitochondria take up intact NAD. Isolated mitochondria preparations cannot make NAD from NAM, and while NAD is synthesized from NMN, it does not localize to the mitochondrial matrix or effectively support oxidative phosphorylation. Treating cells with nicotinamide riboside that is isotopically labeled on the nicotinamide and ribose moieties results in the appearance of doubly labeled NAD within mitochondria. Analogous experiments with doubly labeled nicotinic acid riboside (labeling cytosolic NAD without labeling NMN) demonstrate that NAD(H) is the imported species. Our results challenge the long-held view that the mitochondrial inner membrane is impermeable to pyridine nucleotides and suggest the existence of an unrecognized mammalian NAD (or NADH) transporter.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
eLife
Volume
7
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.33246
Alternate Journal
Elife
PMID
29893687
PMCID
PMC6013257
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