학술논문

Vitamin B3 modulates mitochondrial vulnerability and prevents glaucoma in aged mice.
Document Type
Article
Source
Science. 2/17/2017, Vol. 355 Issue 6326, p756-760. 5p. 3 Graphs.
Subject
*GLAUCOMA
*NEURODEGENERATION
*NICOTINAMIDE
*MITOCHONDRIA
*MOUSE diseases
*NICOTINAMIDE nucleotides
Language
ISSN
0036-8075
Abstract
Glaucomas are neurodegenerative diseases that cause vision loss, especially in the elderly. The mechanisms initiating glaucoma and driving neuronal vulnerability during normal aging are unknown. Studying glaucoma-prone mice, we show that mitochondrial abnormalities are an early driver of neuronal dysfunction, occurring before detectable degeneration. Retinal levels of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+, a key molecule in energy and redox metabolism) decrease with age and render aging neurons vulnerable to disease-related insults. Oral administration of the NAD+ precursor nicotinamide (vitamin B3), and/or gene therapy (driving expression of Nmnat1, a key NAD+-producing enzyme), was protective both prophylactically and as an intervention. At the highest dose tested, 93% of eyes did not develop glaucoma. This supports therapeutic use of vitamin B3 in glaucoma and potentially other age-related neurodegenerations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]