Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
NAD + -Boosting Ameliorates Heme Protein-Mediated Acute Kidney Injury.
- Journal:
- Kidney360
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Singh, Raman Deep et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Medicine
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
KEY POINTS: Understanding how heme proteins/heme induce AKI and whether NAD + -boosting ameliorates heme protein-mediated AKI is clinically relevant. Heme proteins/heme directly decrease kidney NAD + content and NAD + -boosting is markedly protective in heme protein-mediated AKI. These findings provide new insights in heme protein-mediated AKI and support interest in NAD + -boosting as a therapeutic strategy in AKI. BACKGROUND: Understanding how heme proteins and heme induce AKI is clinically relevant from numerous perspectives, and, in this regard, a widely used model of heme protein-mediated AKI (HP-AKI) involves the glycerol model in mice. Using this model, we have previously demonstrated that NAD + content is decreased in HP-AKI. Because there is significant current interest in NAD + -boosting as a strategy in clinical AKI, we examined the effect of NAD + -boosting in this model. METHODS: NAD + -boosting was achieved by the administration of nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) in the glycerol model of HP-AKI. The effect of NMN, compared with vehicle, was examined in mice with HP-AKI and with sham AKI at day 1 after HP-AKI was induced. RESULTS: The administration of NMN preserved kidney NAD + content in HP-AKI, and compared with the administration of vehicle in HP-AKI, NMN improved glomerular filtration markers; reduced histologic injury as assessed by tubular necrosis, dilation, and cast formation and by assessment of dystrophic calcification; reduced expression of kidney injury marker 1, a sensitive marker of AKI; preserved mitochondrial ultrastructure and increased expression of proteins that promote mitochondrial integrity; reduced apoptosis as assessed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated digoxigenin-deoxyuridine nick-end labeling staining and genes and protein expression that contribute to apoptosis, while increasing expression of an anti-apoptotic gene; reduced expression of several renal injury-related genes; and mitigated the severity of the senescence phenotype, as assessed by multiple markers. Finally, the administration of myoglobin or heme in vivo diminished kidney NAD + content in mice with intact kidneys. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate the remarkable protective effects of NAD + -boosting by NMN in HP-AKI as revealed by a multitude of markers relevant to AKI. The reduction in NAD + content in the kidney in HP-AKI may reflect the direct effects of heme proteins and/or heme. We suggest that these findings support current interest in NAD + -boosting as a therapeutic strategy in clinical AKI.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41289025/