Circadian Clock NAD <sup>+</sup> Cycle Drives Mitochondrial Oxidative Metabolism in Mice

Clara Bien Peek(Northwestern University), Alison H. Affinati(Northwestern University), Kathryn Moynihan Ramsey(Northwestern University), Hsin-Yu Kuo(Northwestern University), Wei Yu(Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery), Laura A. Sena(Northwestern University), Olga Ilkayeva(Duke University), Biliana Marcheva(Northwestern University), Yumiko Kobayashi(Northwestern University), Chiaki Omura(Northwestern University), Daniel C. Levine(Northwestern University), David J. Bacsik(Northwestern University), David Gius(Northwestern University), Christopher B. Newgard(Duke University), Eric S. Goetzman(University of Pittsburgh), Navdeep S. Chandel(Northwestern University), John M. Denu(Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery), Milan Mrksich(Northwestern University), Joseph Bass(Northwestern University)
Science
September 20, 2013
Cited by 644Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Circadian clocks are self-sustained cellular oscillators that synchronize oxidative and reductive cycles in anticipation of the solar cycle. We found that the clock transcription feedback loop produces cycles of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+)) biosynthesis, adenosine triphosphate production, and mitochondrial respiration through modulation of mitochondrial protein acetylation to synchronize oxidative metabolic pathways with the 24-hour fasting and feeding cycle. Circadian control of the activity of the NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase sirtuin 3 (SIRT3) generated rhythms in the acetylation and activity of oxidative enzymes and respiration in isolated mitochondria, and NAD(+) supplementation restored protein deacetylation and enhanced oxygen consumption in circadian mutant mice. Thus, circadian control of NAD(+) bioavailability modulates mitochondrial oxidative function and organismal metabolism across the daily cycles of fasting and feeding.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis