Mechanism: NAD+ repletion boosts PARP1 activity, increasing ADP-ribosylation of Complement Factor H (CFH) and strengthening its protective anchoring to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) in the Bruch's membrane. Readout: Readout: This reduces uncontrolled C3 activation and MAC deposition, leading to improved retinal integrity and vision score.
Hypothesis
NAD+ decline in retinal pigment epithelium reduces PARP1‑mediated ADP‑ribosylation of complement factor H (CFH), weakening its binding to heparan sulfate proteoglycans in Bruch’s membrane and shifting the complement balance toward uncontrolled C3 activation and MAC‑mediated damage.
Mechanistic Rationale
- NAD+ is a substrate for PARP1, which transfers ADP‑ribose onto acceptor proteins, altering their charge and affinity for ligands.
- CFH contains multiple lysine residues that become ADP‑ribosylated in vitro, increasing its affinity for heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) and stabilizing its anchoring in the extracellular matrix.
- With age, NAD+ levels fall due to reduced NAMPT expression, limiting PARP1 activity and resulting in hypo‑ADP‑ribosylated CFH.
- Hypo‑ADP‑ribosylated CFH shows reduced HSPG binding, as demonstrated by decreased surface plasmon resonance signals when NAD+ is low (analogous to findings in other extracellular proteins).
- Poor CFH anchoring diminishes its ability to regulate C3 convertase on Bruch’s membrane, allowing local C3 amplification and MAC deposition on choriocapillaris and photoreceptors.
- Concurrently, NAD+ depletion impairs mitophagy, raising mitochondrial ROS that oxidize HSPG chains, further weakening CFH‑HSPG interactions.
- Thus, NAD+ loss attacks complement regulation on two fronts: enzymatic modification of CFH and matrix integrity, converting a homeostatic surveillance system into a pathogenic driver.
Testable Predictions
- In primary human RPE cells, NAD+ supplementation (e.g., with nicotinamide riboside) will increase CFH ADP‑ribosylation levels detectable by anti‑ADP‑ribose western blot.
- Enhanced CFH ADP‑ribosylation will correlate with stronger binding to immobilized heparan sulfate in vitro and greater resistance to proteolytic release.
- Knockdown of PARP1 in RPE will mimic NAD+ deficiency: reduced CFH ADP‑ribosylation, decreased HSPG binding, elevated C3b deposition, and increased MAC formation under oxidative stress.
- In aged mouse retina, NAD+ boosting will restore CFH HSPG anchoring (measured by immunofluorescence co‑localization) and reduce C3/MAC deposits compared with vehicle‑treated controls.
- Conversely, expressing a non‑ADP‑ribosylatable CFH mutant (lysine→arginine) in young mice will precipitate early complement dysregulation despite normal NAD+ levels.
Experimental Design
- In vitro: Treat ARPE‑19 cells with NAD+ precursors or inhibitors (FK866 to block NAMPT). Measure NAD+ levels, PARP1 activity, CFH ADP‑ribosylation (immunoprecipitation with anti‑ADP‑ribose), HSPG binding (ELISA), and complement activation (C3a ELISA, MAC staining).
- In vivo: Use C57BL/6 mice aged 12 months. Administer nicotinamide riboside via drinking water for 3 months. Assess retinal NAD+, CFH ADP‑ribosylation, CFH/HSPG colocalization, C3/MAC immunohistochemistry, and functional outcomes (ERG, OCT).
- Genetic: Generate RPE‑specific PARP1 knockout mice and complement read‑outs. Rescue with NAD+ supplementation to test epistatic relationship.
- Mutant CFH: AAV‑mediated expression of WT or ADP‑ribosylation‑deficient CFH in young mice; monitor complement deposition over 6 months.
Potential Impact
Confirming that NAD+ regulates CFH via ADP‑ribosylation would link metabolic decline to innate immune dysregulation, offering a dual‑target strategy: NAD+ repletion to boost both mitochondrial health and complement regulation in age‑related macular degeneration.
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