From Pharmacophore to Warhead: NAD+-Targeting Triazoles as Mechanism-Based Sirtuin Inhibitors
2025-08-19
Florian Friedrich, Marat Meleshin, Niklas Papenkordt, Lena Gaitzsch, Isabel Prucker, Marco Borso, Jan Ruprecht, Christopher Vorreiter, Sabrina Rast, Lin Zhang, Matthias Schiedel, Wolfgang Sippl, Axel Imhof, Henning J. Jessen, Oliver Einsle, Mike Schutkowski, and Manfred Jung
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2025, e16782
Sirtuins (SIRTs) are nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+)-dependent lysine deacylases linked to key physiological and disease processes. Here, we report a new class of mechanism-based 1,2,3-triazole inhibitors that hijack SIRT catalysis by forming stalled triazolium– or triazole–ADP-ribose (ADPR) adducts derived from the cofactor NAD+.
These trapped adducts inhibit the enzyme without covalent protein modification, prompting us to term the compounds “Sirtuin Trapping Ligands” (SirTraps). X-ray crystallography and kinetics, together with mass spectrometry confirming adduct formation both in vitro and in cellulo, reveal that the triazole N3 of peptide- and small-molecule-based SirTraps triggers nucleophilic attack at C1’ of the nicotinamide riboside moiety of NAD+, mimicking the first deacylation step.
Adduct formation critically depends on precise triazole positioning within the acyl-lysine channel and can be tuned through scaffold design, enabling potent and isoform-selective inhibition. Unlike thiocarbonyl-based NAD+-targeting SIRT inhibitors, which may suffer from instability and off-target effects, SirTraps combine high stability, synthetic accessibility, and structural tunability, while demonstrating nanomolar cellular target engagement confirmed by NanoBRET assays.
Beyond SIRTs, this inhibition strategy may extend to other NAD+-dependent enzymes, including ADP-ribosyltransferases, opening new avenues for mechanism-driven drug discovery.

Speaker: Prof. Dr. Thomas Carell
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Institut für Chemische Epigenetik (ICEM)
Department of Chemistry
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Germany
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Management: Dr. Nada Raddaoui
Institute for Chemical Epigenetics Munich (ICEM)
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Germany
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Secretary: Birgit Carell
Institute for Chemical Epigenetics Munich (ICEM)
Office:
Würmtalstrasse 201, Building L, Room 00.007
81377 Munich
Germany
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Prof. Dr. Lena Daumann
LMU Munich
Department of Chemistry
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Dr. Sabine Schneider
LMU Munich
Institute for Chemical Epigenetics
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Dr. Martin Sumser (Coordinator)
LMU Munich
Institute for Chemical Epigenetics
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