Abstract

A common approach to studying thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP)-dependent enzymes is by chemical inhibition with thiamine/TPP analogues which feature a neutral aromatic ring in place of the positive thiazolium ring of TPP. These are potent inhibitors but their preparation generally involves multiple synthetic steps to construct the central ring. We report efficient syntheses of novel, open-chain thiamine analogues which potently inhibit TPP-dependent enzymes and are predicted to share the same binding mode as TPP. We also report some open-chain analogues that inhibit pyruvate dehydrogenase E1-subunit (PDH E1) and are predicted to occupy additional pockets in the enzyme other than the TPP-binding pockets. This opens up new possibilities for increasing the affinity and selectivity of the analogues for PDH, which is an established anti-cancer target.

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