Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, School of Basic Medicine and Clinical Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing
211198, China
2. Precision Medicine Laboratory, School of Basic Medicine and Clinical Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical
University, Nanjing 211198, China
Abstract
Background:
Chaiqin Qingning capsule (CQQNC) has been used to relieve pain in practice.
However, the active components, pain targets, and molecular mechanisms for pain control are unclear.
Objective:
To explore the active components and potential mechanisms of the analgesic effect of CQQNC
through network pharmacology and in vitro experiments.
Methods:
The main active components and the corresponding targets of CQQNC were screened from the
TCMSP and the SwissTargetPrediction databases. Pain-related targets were selected in the OMIM, Gene-
Cards, and DrugBank databases. These targets were intersected to obtain potential analgesic targets. The analgesic
targets were imported into the STRING and DAVID databases for protein-protein interaction (PPI),
gene ontology (GO) function enrichment and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway
enrichment analyses. Cytoscape software (V3.7.1) was used to construct an active component-intersection
network. Finally, the key components were docked with the core targets. The analgesic mechanism of
CQQNC was verified by RAW264.7 cell experiment.
Results:
30 active CQQNC components, 617 corresponding targets, and 3,214 pain-related target genes were
found. The main active components were quercetin, kaempferol, and chenodeoxycholic acid etc. The key targets
were ALB, AKT1, TNF, IL6, TP53, IL1B, and SRC. CQQNC can exert an analgesic effect through
PI3K-Akt, MAPK signaling pathways, etc. Molecular docking showed that these active components had good
binding activities with key targets. The results of in vitro experiments showed that CQQNC could exert antiinflammatory
and analgesic effects through MAPK/AKT/NF-kB signaling pathways.
Conclusion:
CQQNC exerts pain control through inhibiting MAPK/AKT/NF-kB signaling pathways.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.