Aiyuan Cai, Ran Liu, Zilong Li, Hailong Huang, Jing Xiao, Yuanhong Lin, Haixia Wu, Ping Liu, Jing Ying, Qingpeng Hu
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究探讨了苍术及其主要活性成分苍术内酯III (ATR-III)通过调节核因子κ b (NF-κB)信号通路减轻小儿癫痫中枢神经系统(CNS)炎症反应的多靶点机制。网络药理学鉴定了AM的活性成分及其靶点,并将其与儿童癫痫相关靶点相结合。基因本体(GO)和京都基因与基因组百科全书(KEGG)分析揭示了潜在的机制,而分子对接评估了ATR-III与关键靶点的结合能力。体外建立lps诱导的小胶质细胞炎症模型,通过CCK-8检测、Western blot、qPCR和JC-1染色评估ATR-III对细胞活力、NF-κB活化、炎症细胞因子表达和线粒体功能的影响。网络药理学显示AM的靶点与小儿癫痫靶点重叠,在神经炎症通路中富集。分子对接证实了ATR-III与NF-κB靶点的强结合。在体外,ATR-III通过恢复膜电位和上调PGC-1α和COX4,显著抑制NF-κB活化,降低p65和i -κB α磷酸化,降低炎症因子,改善lps诱导的线粒体功能障碍。本研究阐明了AM和ATR-III减轻中枢神经系统炎症和改善线粒体功能的机制,为AM在小儿癫痫中的应用提供了理论基础,并突出了ATR-III作为天然抗炎药的潜力。
Atractylodes macrocephala compounds attenuate pediatric epilepsy neuroinflammation through multitarget regulation of the NF-κB pathway.
This study investigates the multi-target mechanisms of Atractylodes macrocephala (AM) and its main active component, Atractylenolide III (ATR-III), in mitigating central nervous system (CNS) inflammatory responses in pediatric epilepsy via modulation of the nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-κB) signaling pathway. Network pharmacology identified AM's active components and their targets, which were integrated with pediatric epilepsy-related targets. Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analyses revealed potential mechanisms, while molecular docking assessed the binding capacity of ATR-III to key targets. In vitro, an LPS-induced microglial inflammation model was used, with CCK-8 assays, Western blot, qPCR, and JC-1 staining evaluating ATR-III's effects on cell viability, NF-κB activation, inflammatory cytokine expression, and mitochondrial function. Network pharmacology showed AM's targets overlap with pediatric epilepsy targets, enriched in neuroinflammation pathways. Molecular docking confirmed ATR-III's strong binding to NF-κB targets. In vitro, ATR-III significantly suppressed NF-κB activation, reduced p65 and IκBα phosphorylation, decreased inflammatory cytokines, and improved LPS-induced mitochondrial dysfunction by restoring membrane potential and upregulating PGC-1α and COX4. This study elucidates AM and ATR-III's mechanisms in reducing CNS inflammation and improving mitochondrial function, offering a theoretical basis for AM's use in pediatric epilepsy and highlighting ATR-III's potential as a natural anti-inflammatory drug.
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