Haiwei Hu, Yongbo Tang, Baotong Zhou, Shuangyan Chen, Jimin Su, Wei Zhong, Yuanyang Wei, Yipeng Huang, Bo Ge
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cystitis glandularis (CG) is a chronic hyperplastic disorder of the bladder, and the available clinical drug therapy is insufficient currently. Glycyrrhetinic acid (GA), a bioactive compound extracted from the roots of Glycyrrhiza glabra, is found with beneficial actions, including anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative effects. We previously reported that GA relieves CG symptoms in animal model, implying the potential application of GA to treat CG. However, the action mechanisms of GA against CG remain unclear. In this study, we aimed to identify the pivotal targets and therapeutic effects of GA through integrated bioinformatics analysis and experimental validation. Integrated bioinformatics analysis screened eleven potential therapeutic targets for GA against CG, and seven pivotal targets were identified subsequently. Enrichment gene analysis revealed GA exhibiting biological activities against CG via regulating multiple pharmacological targets and molecular pathways associated with inflammatory reaction and oxidative stress. Molecular docking computation revealed potent affinity and interaction between GA and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2) and mucin 1 (MUC1) proteins in CG. To validate biochemically, increased mRNA and protein expressions of PTGS2 and MUC1 were observed in human CG samples. Compared to CG mice, GA-treated CG mice exhibited reduced inflammatory cytokine contents and downregulated PTGS2 and MUC1 mRNA and protein levels. These integrated findings suggest the potential therapeutic effects of GA against CG via the regulation of targeting genes and pathways. However, further studies are necessary to perform and facilitate the clinical application of GA for treating CG.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Diversity is a new publication forum for the rapid publication of refereed papers dedicated to describing the development, application and theory of molecular diversity and combinatorial chemistry in basic and applied research and drug discovery. The journal publishes both short and full papers, perspectives, news and reviews dealing with all aspects of the generation of molecular diversity, application of diversity for screening against alternative targets of all types (biological, biophysical, technological), analysis of results obtained and their application in various scientific disciplines/approaches including:
combinatorial chemistry and parallel synthesis;
small molecule libraries;
microwave synthesis;
flow synthesis;
fluorous synthesis;
diversity oriented synthesis (DOS);
nanoreactors;
click chemistry;
multiplex technologies;
fragment- and ligand-based design;
structure/function/SAR;
computational chemistry and molecular design;
chemoinformatics;
screening techniques and screening interfaces;
analytical and purification methods;
robotics, automation and miniaturization;
targeted libraries;
display libraries;
peptides and peptoids;
proteins;
oligonucleotides;
carbohydrates;
natural diversity;
new methods of library formulation and deconvolution;
directed evolution, origin of life and recombination;
search techniques, landscapes, random chemistry and more;