CD38 ecto-enzyme in immune cells is induced during aging and regulates NAD+ and NMN levels.

Journal: Nature Metabolism
Published:
Abstract

Decreased NAD+ levels have been shown to contribute to metabolic dysfunction during aging. NAD+ decline can be partially prevented by knockout of the enzyme CD38. However, it is not known how CD38 is regulated during aging, and how its ecto-enzymatic activity impacts NAD+ homeostasis. Here we show that an increase in CD38 in white adipose tissue (WAT) and the liver during aging is mediated by accumulation of CD38+ immune cells. Inflammation increases CD38 and decreases NAD+. In addition, senescent cells and their secreted signals promote accumulation of CD38+ cells in WAT, and ablation of senescent cells or their secretory phenotype decreases CD38, partially reversing NAD+ decline. Finally, blocking the ecto-enzymatic activity of CD38 can increase NAD+ through a nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN)-dependent process. Our findings demonstrate that senescence-induced inflammation promotes accumulation of CD38 in immune cells that, through its ecto-enzymatic activity, decreases levels of NMN and NAD+.

Authors
Claudia C Chini, Thais Peclat, Gina Warner, Sonu Kashyap, Jair Espindola Netto, Guilherme De Oliveira, Lilian Gomez, Kelly Hogan, Mariana Tarragó, Amrutesh Puranik, Guillermo Agorrody, Katie Thompson, Kevin Dang, Starlynn Clarke, Bennett Childs, Karina Kanamori, Micaela Witte, Paola Vidal, Anna Kirkland, Marco De Cecco, Karthikeyani Chellappa, Melanie Mcreynolds, Connor Jankowski, Tamara Tchkonia, James Kirkland, John Sedivy, Jan Van Deursen, Darren Baker, Wim Van Schooten, Joshua Rabinowitz, Joseph Baur, Eduardo Chini
Relevant Conditions

Bone Marrow Transplant