NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) might be the most important molecule you've never heard of. It's essential for energy production, DNA repair, and cellular signaling. And it declines significantly with age.
Why NAD+ Matters
- Energy metabolism: NAD+ is essential for converting food into cellular energy (ATP) via mitochondria
- Cellular maintenance: NAD+ powers sirtuins (proteins that regulate aging), PARP enzymes (DNA repair), and CD38 (immune function)
By age 60, NAD+ levels may be half what they were at age 20.
The Precursor Strategy
NMN (Nicotinamide Mononucleotide): One enzymatic step from NAD+. Popularized by Harvard researcher David Sinclair. Animal studies show improved insulin sensitivity and enhanced exercise capacity in aged mice.
NR (Nicotinamide Riboside): Two steps from NAD+. Sold as Niagen. Has more human trial data than NMN, though results have been mixed.
What Human Trials Show
Multiple trials confirm both NMN and NR raise blood NAD+ levels. A 2022 Science study showed NMN (250mg/day) increased NAD+ by ~38% in healthy middle-aged men. However, raising NAD+ levels doesn't automatically mean improved health outcomes. Human trials have shown:
- Modest improvements in insulin sensitivity (some studies)
- Slight improvements in aerobic capacity in older adults
- No consistent improvements in inflammation, fatigue, or cognitive function
- No serious adverse effects (good safety profile)
The Practical Question
If optimizing on a budget: Evidence doesn't yet justify the cost ($50-150/month). Spend on better food, gym membership, or sleep optimization.
If already optimized on basics: NMN and NR appear safe at studied doses (250-500mg/day for NMN). Consider it an investment in possibility rather than a proven intervention.
Key Takeaways
NAD+ decline is real and likely contributes to aging. Precursor supplementation can raise NAD+ levels. But evidence that this translates into meaningful health benefits is still early-stage. The basics โ sleep, exercise, nutrition โ remain the highest-evidence longevity interventions.