Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

A need for NAD+ in muscle development, homeostasis, and aging

Michelle F. Goody, Clarissa A. Henry

Skeletal Muscle · 2018 · ▲ 78 citations

Abstract

Skeletal muscle enables posture, breathing, and locomotion. Skeletal muscle also impacts systemic processes such as metabolism, thermoregulation, and immunity. Skeletal muscle is energetically expensive and is a major consumer of glucose and fatty acids. Metabolism of fatty acids and glucose requires NAD+ function as a hydrogen/electron transfer molecule. Therefore, NAD+ plays a vital role in energy production. In addition, NAD+ also functions as a cosubstrate for post-translational modifications such as deacetylation and ADP-ribosylation. Therefore, NAD+ levels influence a myriad of cellular processes including mitochondrial biogenesis, transcription, and organization of the extracellular matrix. Clearly, NAD+ is a major player in skeletal muscle development, regeneration, aging, and disease. The vast majority of studies indicate that lower NAD+ levels are deleterious for muscle health and higher NAD+ levels augment muscle health. However, the downstream mechanisms of NAD+ function throughout different cellular compartments are not well understood. The purpose of this review is to highlight recent studies investigating NAD+ function in muscle development, homeostasis, disease, and regeneration. Emerging research areas include elucidating roles for NAD+ in muscle lysosome function and calcium mobilization, mechanisms controlling fluctuations in NAD+ levels during muscle development and regeneration, and interactions between targets of NAD+ signaling (especially mitochondria and the extracellular matrix). This knowledge should facilitate identification of more precise pharmacological and activity-based interventions to raise NAD+ levels in skeletal muscle, thereby promoting human health and function in normal and disease states.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1186/s13395-018-0154-1
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-16 MST

Cite this

APA
Goody, M.F., &amp; Henry, C.A. (2018). A need for NAD+ in muscle development, homeostasis, and aging. <em>Skeletal Muscle</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13395-018-0154-1
Vancouver
Goody MF, Henry CA. A need for NAD+ in muscle development, homeostasis, and aging. Skeletal Muscle. 2018. doi:10.1186/s13395-018-0154-1.
BibTeX
@article{michelle2018Aneedf, title = {A need for NAD+ in muscle development, homeostasis, and aging}, author = {Michelle F. Goody and Clarissa A. Henry}, journal = {Skeletal Muscle}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1186/s13395-018-0154-1}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings