TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic Endurance Exercise Impairs Niacin Nutritional Status in Mice
AU - Mizutani, Amane
AU - Nishikawa, Tatsumasa
AU - Fujigaki, Hidetsugu
AU - Yamamoto, Yasuko
AU - Saito, Kuniaki
AU - Hatayama, Sho
AU - Fukuwatari, Tsutomu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Center for Academic Publications Japan. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Niacin is a cofactor in many biological reactions related to energy metabolism, redox reactions, DNA repair and longevity. Although it has been considered that increasing energy expenditure increases NAD consumption, little study has directly demonstrated the effect of exercise on niacin nutritional status. We have recently established the niacin insufficient model mice using kynurenine 3-monooxygenase knock out (KMO-/-) mice with niacin-limited diet, which lack the de novo NAD synthesis pathway from tryptophan. To evaluate the effects of chronic endurance exercise on niacin nutritional status, 4 wk old KMO-/- mice were fed 4 or 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid containing diets, and forced to swim in a running water pool every other day for 35 d. The swim-exercised mice fed 4 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet showed lower body weight gain and niacin nutritional markers such as liver and blood NAD, and urine nicotinamide metabolites than the sedentary mice. These animals did not show any difference in the NAD synthesis, NAD salvage and nicotinamide catabolic pathways. Chronic endurance exercise failed to affect any indices in the mice fed the 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet. When the diet was exchanged the 4 mg/kg for 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet to the mice showed chronic endurance exercise-induced growth retardation, their body weight rapidly increased. These results show that chronic endurance exercise impairs niacin nutritional status in the niacin insufficient mice, and enough niacin intake can prevent this impairment. Our findings also suggest that chronic endurance exercise increases niacin requirement by increase of NAD consumption.
AB - Niacin is a cofactor in many biological reactions related to energy metabolism, redox reactions, DNA repair and longevity. Although it has been considered that increasing energy expenditure increases NAD consumption, little study has directly demonstrated the effect of exercise on niacin nutritional status. We have recently established the niacin insufficient model mice using kynurenine 3-monooxygenase knock out (KMO-/-) mice with niacin-limited diet, which lack the de novo NAD synthesis pathway from tryptophan. To evaluate the effects of chronic endurance exercise on niacin nutritional status, 4 wk old KMO-/- mice were fed 4 or 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid containing diets, and forced to swim in a running water pool every other day for 35 d. The swim-exercised mice fed 4 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet showed lower body weight gain and niacin nutritional markers such as liver and blood NAD, and urine nicotinamide metabolites than the sedentary mice. These animals did not show any difference in the NAD synthesis, NAD salvage and nicotinamide catabolic pathways. Chronic endurance exercise failed to affect any indices in the mice fed the 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet. When the diet was exchanged the 4 mg/kg for 30 mg/kg nicotinic acid diet to the mice showed chronic endurance exercise-induced growth retardation, their body weight rapidly increased. These results show that chronic endurance exercise impairs niacin nutritional status in the niacin insufficient mice, and enough niacin intake can prevent this impairment. Our findings also suggest that chronic endurance exercise increases niacin requirement by increase of NAD consumption.
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U2 - 10.3177/jnsv.70.185
DO - 10.3177/jnsv.70.185
M3 - Article
C2 - 38945883
AN - SCOPUS:85197597354
SN - 0301-4800
VL - 70
SP - 185
EP - 192
JO - Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology
JF - Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology
IS - 3
ER -