Affiliation:
1. Section on DNA Repair, National Institute on Aging National Institutes of Health Baltimore Maryland USA
2. Waitt Advanced Biophotonics Center Salk Institute for Biological Studies La Jolla California USA
3. Computational Biology & Genomics Core, National Institute on Aging National Institutes of Health Baltimore Maryland USA
4. Danish Center for Healthy Aging University of Copenhagen Copenhagen N Denmark
Abstract
AbstractAge‐related hearing loss (ARHL) is the most common sensory disability associated with human aging. Yet, there are no approved measures for preventing or treating this debilitating condition. With its slow progression, continuous and safe approaches are critical for ARHL treatment. Nicotinamide Riboside (NR), a NAD+ precursor, is well tolerated even for long‐term use and is already shown effective in various disease models including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. It has also been beneficial against noise‐induced hearing loss and in hearing loss associated with premature aging. However, its beneficial impact on ARHL is not known. Using two different wild‐type mouse strains, we show that long‐term NR administration prevents the progression of ARHL. Through transcriptomic and biochemical analysis, we find that NR administration restores age‐associated reduction in cochlear NAD+ levels, upregulates biological pathways associated with synaptic transmission and PPAR signaling, and reduces the number of orphan ribbon synapses between afferent auditory neurons and inner hair cells. We also find that NR targets a novel pathway of lipid droplets in the cochlea by inducing the expression of CIDEC and PLIN1 proteins that are downstream of PPAR signaling and are key for lipid droplet growth. Taken together, our results demonstrate the therapeutic potential of NR treatment for ARHL and provide novel insights into its mechanism of action.
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6 articles.
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