NAD+ 1,000mg Peptides
Precision begins with dependable materials—built for researchers who require consistency from the first measurement to the final data point.
The Primavora NAD+ lyophilized research vial delivers oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide in a clean, freeze-dried format for controlled laboratory work. This non-flavored, powder-style preparation is designed for accurate weighing, straightforward documentation, and reproducible reconstitution. Total content per vial is 1,000mg, organized for labs that value traceability, purity, and standardized handling across experiments.
- Each vial contains 1,000mg of NAD+, an oxidized coenzyme used in studies of cellular energy metabolism, redox cycling, and enzyme pathways where precise cofactor concentrations are critical to method fidelity.
In use, the lyophilized format supports consistent solution preparation and efficient storage. Reconstitute with an appropriate solvent per your internal protocol to achieve target concentration or molarity; the uniform powder aids in controlled dilution planning and repeatable sample prep. Clear labeling and lot identification are structured to align with common QA/QC workflows, helping streamline chain-of-custody records, method validation, and audit readiness.
Every Primavora compound is managed with restraint and care to minimize variability. This NAD+ offering reflects a disciplined approach: thoughtful packaging, careful environmental handling, and prioritization of material integrity to support credible, defensible results. Whether you are establishing baseline assays, exploring redox-dependent mechanisms, or maintaining standardized controls, the focus is on dependable composition and batch-to-batch continuity.
Quality and Safety: Primavora materials are sourced and handled in the USA and undergo third-party analytical verification for identity and purity. Each batch is produced for laboratory research use only and is not intended for human consumption, medical, or veterinary applications. Use only as directed in qualified research settings with appropriate controls, documentation, and safety practices. With transparent specifications and rigorous standards, Primavora provides researchers with a confident foundation for methodical, high-quality work.
- Most orders ship within 24 hours and arrive within 3 to 5 days of leaving our warehouse.
- Shipping is free on orders of $99+ (except Hawaii and Alaska).
- All orders ship in discreet packaging via USPS Ground Advantage mail.
Delivery restrictions vary by state.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is NAD+?
NAD+ is a core cellular coenzyme involved in redox reactions, mitochondrial metabolism, and several signaling enzymes such as sirtuins and PARPs. It is not a peptide, so it should not be described as one. The accurate website framing is that NAD+ is a laboratory compound studied for energy metabolism and cellular repair pathways.
What is NAD+ typically studied for?
Researchers usually study NAD+ in relation to mitochondrial function, cellular energy production, stress response, DNA-repair-related biology, and aging-associated metabolic decline. A useful FAQ should keep the wording mechanistic and research-based rather than making sweeping longevity promises.
Why are vitamins paired with peptide research?
Many vitamins serve as precursors for coenzymes that are essential in the biochemical pathways peptides interact with. For example, B-complex vitamins are precursors for coenzymes involved in amino acid metabolism, redox chemistry, and methylation pathways — all of which intersect with peptide biology. Including vitamin reference materials alongside peptides allows researchers to run more complete experiments without sourcing components from multiple suppliers.
This pairing is particularly common in metabolic, mitochondrial, and longevity-related research, where peptide signaling and vitamin-dependent coenzyme activity are often studied in parallel.
What are peptide cofactors?
In biochemistry, a cofactor is a non-protein chemical that is required for a protein or peptide to carry out its biological activity. Common cofactors include metal ions such as copper, zinc, magnesium, and iron, as well as small organic molecules known as coenzymes — many of which are derived from vitamins.
Peptide research often involves cofactors in two ways: as necessary components of certain peptide activities (for example, copper in GHK-Cu), and as reference materials used alongside peptides in enzymatic and metabolic assays. The Vitamins & Cofactors category on Prima Vora provides such supporting research materials in lyophilized form for laboratory use.
What is the role of NAD+ and B-vitamins in peptide studies?
NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a central coenzyme in cellular metabolism, involved in redox reactions and in the activity of enzymes such as sirtuins and PARPs. It is derived from niacin (vitamin B3) and is widely used in research on cellular energy metabolism, aging, and mitochondrial function — areas where peptides such as MOTS-c and SS-31 are also studied.
Other B-vitamins, including B12 (cobalamin), serve as precursors for coenzymes involved in one-carbon metabolism and methylation, which are relevant to a wide range of peptide-related research. Supplying NAD+ and B-vitamins alongside peptide reference materials enables more integrated laboratory studies of these interconnected pathways.