研究業績

Science Advances 11, 45, eady9811 (2025)
NAD+ reverses Alzheimer’s neurological deficits via regulating differential alternative RNA splicing of EVA1C.

著者

Ruixue Ai, Lipeng Mao, Xurui Jin, Carlos Campos-Marques, Shi-qi Zhang, Junping Pan, Maria Jose Lagartos-Donate, Shu-Qin Cao, Beatriz Barros-Santos, Rita Nóbrega-Martins, Filippos Katsaitis, Guang Yang, Chenglong Xie, Xiongbin Kang, Pingjie Wang, Manuele Novello, Yang Hu, Linda Hildegard Bergersen, Jon Storm-Mathisen, Hidehito Kuroyanagi, Beatriz Escobar Doncel, Noemí Villaseca González, Farrukh Abbas Chaudhry, Zeyuan Wang, Qiang Zhang, Guang Lu, Ioannis Sotiropoulos, Zhangming Niu, Guobing Chen, Rajeevkumar Raveendran Nair, Joana Margarida Silva*, Oscar Junhong Luo*, Evandro Fei Fang*.

カテゴリ

原著論文

Abstract

Dysfunctional alternative splicing events (ASEs) in RNA are markers of aging and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). As a key neuronal resilience metabolite, the oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) slows down AD progression in preclinical studies with several clinical trials ongoing. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms around how NAD+ enhances neuronal resilience, especially whether it has any effect on ASEs, have remained elusive. This study shows that NAD+ augmentation corrects the ASEs of many genes via a key protein, EVA1C (epithelial V-like antigen 1 homolog C), which is involved in neuronal development and activities. EVA1C is reduced in the hippocampus in patients with AD compared to cognitively normal ones. NAD+-induced memory retention is partially dependent on EVA1C, as adeno-associated virus–based Eva1c knockdown in the hippocampal CA1 region annuls NAD+-induced memory improvement in pathological Tau–bearing mice. We propose that NAD+ reduces AD pathologies, at least partially, via amplification of the NAD+-EVA1C splicing axis, pointing to a potential splice-switching therapy for AD.