NAD+ · Research FAQ
Research FAQ
Common laboratory-reference questions about NAD+ (β-Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (NAD+)), answered as research information. Nothing here is medical advice, a dosing instruction, or a claim about effects in people. For research use only. Not for human consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use.
NAD+ in brief
NAD+ is a research-grade coenzyme in the Performance & Longevity category. An essential redox coenzyme studied across cellular-metabolism, DNA-repair, and longevity-pathway research.
The questions below cover identity, handling, and compliance. For depth, see the dedicated chemistry, storage, and reconstitution references.
Available from Blueprint Labs
NAD+ 100mg
Third-party tested, NAD+ supplied as a research material with a certificate of analysis available.
Questions, answered
What is NAD+?
NAD+ (β-Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (NAD+)) is a research coenzyme studied in research on cellular-metabolism research and longevity-pathway studies. It is supplied strictly as a research material.
How is NAD+ classified?
It is a research coenzyme, also known as NAD+, NAD, and Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide.
How should NAD+ be stored?
The documented condition is −20°C, desiccated, strictly light-protected. Keep it cold, dry, desiccated, and light-protected; reconstituted material is refrigerated and shorter-lived.
How is NAD+ reconstituted?
By dissolving the 100 mg vial in bacteriostatic water. The concentration is set by mass ÷ solvent volume. For example, 100 mg in 1 mL gives 100 mg/mL. This is laboratory preparation math, not a dose.
How is the quality of NAD+ verified?
It is documented at ≥98% (HPLC verified) and third-party tested, with identity by LC-MS and purity by HPLC. A certificate of analysis is available for the batch.
Is NAD+ for human use?
No. For research use only. Not for human consumption, diagnostic, or therapeutic use. It is not for human or animal consumption and carries no medical, therapeutic, or diagnostic use.
How does NAD+ compare to Semax?
They are distinct research compounds with different reported targets: NAD+ with sirtuin (SIRT) activity, Semax with BDNF / TrkB signaling. See the NAD+ vs Semax comparison for a neutral breakdown. Neither is presented as "better."
Where does the information on this page come from?
It summarizes published scientific literature and product documentation in general terms for laboratory reference. Consult primary sources for study specifics.