Also known as vitamin B1, thiaminium, Thiamin, 2-[3-[(4-amino-2-methyl-pyrimidin-5-yl)methyl]-4-methyl-1-thia-3-azoniacyclopenta-2,4-dien-5-yl]ethanol, 2-[3-[(4-amino-2-methyl-pyrimidin-5-yl)methyl]-4-methyl-thiazol-5-yl]ethanol, VIB, Benerva, Bequin
Thiamine, also known as thiamin and vitamin B1, is a vitamin – an essential micronutrient for humans and animals. It is found in food and commercially synthesized to be a dietary supplement or medication. Phosphorylated forms of thiamine are required for some metabolic reactions, including the breakdown of glucose and amino acids.
Thiamine(1+) ion is the charged form of thiamine, also known as vitamin B1, an essential micronutrient that your body needs to function properly. Your body uses phosphorylated versions of thiamine to help break down glucose and amino acids, which are key processes for converting food into energy.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).