AI Article Synopsis

  • Aspirin is commonly used for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases but causes gastrointestinal injuries, limiting its long-term use.
  • Previous studies suggest that Panax Notoginseng Saponins (PNS) might help alleviate these injuries, but the exact protective mechanisms were unclear.
  • A network pharmacology approach identified potential targets for PNS and aspirin, and experiments showed that PNS could protect against aspirin-induced gastrointestinal damage by increasing VEGFA expression.

Article Abstract

Background & Aims: Aspirin is the first line therapy for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and is widely used. However aspirin-induced gastrointestinal injury is one of its most common side effect which limits long-term use. Panax Notoginseng Saponins(PNS) which is also used to prevent thrombus may alleviate this side effect according to previous clinical evidences. Owing to the complexity of drug combination, the protective mechanism of PNS on aspirin-induced gastrointestinal injury remains unclear. Therefore, a network pharmacology-based strategy was proposed in this study to address this problem.

Methods: A network pharmacology approach comprising multiple components, candidate targets of each component, known therapeutic targets, network analysis has been used in this study. Also, we establish aspirin-induced gastrointestinal injury model by the oral administration of aspirin (0.5 g/kg body weight) to verify the predicted targets from network pharmacology. All rats was randomly allocated to control groups (n = 6),aspirin groups (n = 6)and aspirin + PNS groups (n = 6) and conducted H&E staining and ELISA for VEGFA.

Results: The comprehensive systematic approach was successfully to identify 5 compounds and 154 candidate targets in PNS and 479 candidate targets in aspirin. After network establishment and analysis, 27 potential targets hit by PNS, aspirin and 6 kind of gastrointestinal diseases were found. The experiments results indicated that aspirin group has visible inflammation and lesions while aspirin + PNS group have not. The higher expression of VEGFA in aspirin + PNS group verified the predicted potential protective targets of PNS.

Conclusions: PNS may have protective function for aspirin-induced gastrointestinal injury through increasing VEGFA expression. Network pharmacology strategy may provide a forceful tool for exploring the mechanism of herb medicine and discovering novel bioactive ingredients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2018.04.054DOI Listing

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