RMIT University
Browse

Molecular Docking And Network Connections Of Active Compounds From The Classical Herbal Formula Ding Chuan Tang

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 12:08 authored by Ally Clyne, Liping Yang, Ming Yang, Brian MayBrian May, Angela YangAngela Yang
Background: Ding Chuan Tang (DCT), a traditional Chinese herbal formula, has been consistently prescribed for the therapeutic management of wheezing and asthma-related indications since the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD). This study aimed to identify molecular network pharmacology connections to understand the biological asthma-linked mechanisms of action of DCT and potentially identify novel avenues for asthma drug development. Methods: Employing molecular docking (AutoDock Vina) and computational analysis (Cytoscape 3.6.0) strategies for DCT compounds permitted examination of docking connections for proteins that were targets of DCT compounds and asthma genes. These identified protein targets were further analyzed to establish and interpret network connections associated with asthma disease pathways. Results: A total of 396 DCT compounds and 234 asthma genes were identified through database search. Computational molecular docking of DCT compounds identified five proteins (ESR1, KDR, LTA4H, PDE4D and PPARG) mutually targeted by asthma genes and DCT compounds and 155 docking connections associated with cellular pathways involved in the biological mechanisms of asthma. Conclusions: DCT compounds directly target biological pathways connected with the pathogenesis of asthma including inflammatory and metabolic signaling pathways.

History

Journal

PeerJ

Volume

8

Number

e8685

Start page

1

End page

25

Total pages

25

Publisher

PeerJ

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 Clyne et al. Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0

Former Identifier

2006098063

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22