NAD+ is nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, a central redox cofactor used across cellular metabolism. It is not a peptide; it is a biochemical reference material connected to dehydrogenases, sirtuins, PARPs, mitochondrial biology, and DNA-repair-associated enzyme systems.
Customers look at NAD+ because it sits at the center of energy and redox chemistry. In plain terms, it helps researchers study how cells transfer electrons, regulate enzyme activity, and connect metabolic state with cellular signalling.
This product is best used as a pathway reference for biochemical and cellular assays, not as a supplement-style wellness product. The specification table covers salt form, identity, purity, solubility, and storage details.
The references below are starting points for the mechanisms discussed here. The specification table on this page covers identity, formula, molecular mass, physical form, solubility, storage, and lot-level analytical information.
References
- PubChem: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
- PubMed: NAD+ sirtuin PARP metabolism
- PubMed: NAD+ mitochondrial metabolism
Research-use notice: Supplied strictly for lawful research, laboratory, analytical, educational, or R&D purposes where permitted by applicable law. Not for human or animal use, consumption, diagnosis, treatment, food, supplement, cosmetic, veterinary, or similar end use.




