Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • Extracellular NAD+ enhances PARP-dependent DNA repair capacity independently of CD73 activity.

Extracellular NAD+ enhances PARP-dependent DNA repair capacity independently of CD73 activity.

Scientific reports (2020-01-22)
Anna Wilk, Faisal Hayat, Richard Cunningham, Jianfeng Li, Silvia Garavaglia, Leila Zamani, Davide M Ferraris, Peter Sykora, Joel Andrews, Jennifer Clark, Amanda Davis, Laurent Chaloin, Menico Rizzi, Marie Migaud, Robert W Sobol
ABSTRACT

Changes in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) levels that compromise mitochondrial function trigger release of DNA damaging reactive oxygen species. NAD+ levels also affect DNA repair capacity as NAD+ is a substrate for PARP-enzymes (mono/poly-ADP-ribosylation) and sirtuins (deacetylation). The ecto-5'-nucleotidase CD73, an ectoenzyme highly expressed in cancer, is suggested to regulate intracellular NAD+ levels by processing NAD+ and its bio-precursor, nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN), from tumor microenvironments, thereby enhancing tumor DNA repair capacity and chemotherapy resistance. We therefore investigated whether expression of CD73 impacts intracellular NAD+ content and NAD+-dependent DNA repair capacity. Reduced intracellular NAD+ levels suppressed recruitment of the DNA repair protein XRCC1 to sites of genomic DNA damage and impacted the amount of accumulated DNA damage. Further, decreased NAD+ reduced the capacity to repair DNA damage induced by DNA alkylating agents. Overall, reversal of these outcomes through NAD+ or NMN supplementation was independent of CD73. In opposition to its proposed role in extracellular NAD+ bioprocessing, we found that recombinant human CD73 only poorly processes NMN but not NAD+. A positive correlation between CD73 expression and intracellular NAD+ content could not be made as CD73 knockout human cells were efficient in generating intracellular NAD+ when supplemented with NAD+ or NMN.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
5′-Nucleotidase human, recombinant, expressed in CHO cells, vial of 6-12 μg