What is NAD+ Buffered?
NAD+ Buffered is a pH-stabilized formulation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide — a central redox coenzyme involved in nearly every catabolic pathway in human metabolism. Solvé's buffered form mitigates the well-known injection-site discomfort of acidic NAD+ preparations in research workflows.
NAD+ is studied for its role in mitochondrial-electron-transport function, sirtuin signaling, and the broader longevity literature.
Note — NAD+ is a coenzyme, not a peptide. It is included in our catalog because of its frequency in peptide-research workflows.
How it's studied — mechanism
NAD+ functions as the universal electron acceptor in mitochondrial energy metabolism. It is also the obligate substrate for:
- Sirtuins (SIRT1-7) — protein-deacetylase signaling, longevity-associated pathways
- PARPs — DNA-damage repair
- CD38 / CD157 — extracellular NAD+ catabolism
NAD+ tissue levels decline with age, motivating its inclusion in longevity-research stacks.
Amino acid sequence
Not a peptide — coenzyme (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide)Published research
The following primary sources are provided to support qualified-researcher review. Inclusion is for reference only and does not constitute medical advice or therapeutic claim.