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Interactive network pharmacology and electrochemical analysis reveals electron transport-mediating characteristics of Chinese medicine formula Jing Guan Fang.
Tsai, Po-Wei; Mailem, Ryan Christian; Tayo, Lemmuel L; Hsueh, Chung-Chuan; Tseng, Chi-Chun; Chen, Bor-Yann.
  • Tsai PW; Department of Medical Science Industries, College of Health Sciences, Chang Jung Christian University, Tainan 711, Taiwan.
  • Mailem RC; School of Chemical, Biological, and Materials Engineering and Sciences, Mapúa University, Manila 1002, Philippines.
  • Tayo LL; Department of Biology, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Mapúa University, Makati 1200, Philippines.
  • Hsueh CC; School of Chemical, Biological, and Materials Engineering and Sciences, Mapúa University, Manila 1002, Philippines.
  • Tseng CC; Department of Biology, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Mapúa University, Makati 1200, Philippines.
  • Chen BY; Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, National I-Lan University, I-Lan 260, Taiwan.
J Taiwan Inst Chem Eng ; 147: 104898, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2319975
ABSTRACT

Background:

Jing Guan Fang (JGF) is an anti-COVID-19 Chinese Medicine decoction comprised of five medicinal herbs to possess anti-inflammatory and antiviral properties for treatment. This study aims to electrochemically decipher the anti-coronavirus activity of JGF and show that microbial fuel cells may serve as a platform for screening efficacious herbal medicines and providing scientific bases for the mechanism of action (MOA) of TCMs.

Methods:

Electrochemical techniques (e.g., cyclic voltammetry) and MFCs were adopted as the bioenergy-based platforms to assess the bioenergy-stimulating characteristics of JGF. Phytochemical analysis correlated polyphenolic and flavonoid content with antioxidant activity and bioenergy-stimulating properties. Network pharmacology on the active compounds was employed to identify anti-inflammatory and anti-COVID-19 protein targets, and molecular docking validated in silico results. Significant

findings:

This first-attempt results show that JGF possesses significant reversible bioenergy-stimulation (amplification 2.02 ± 0.04) properties suggesting that its antiviral efficacy is both bioenergy-steered and electron mediated. Major flavonoids and flavone glycosides identified by HPLC (e.g., baicalein and baicalin, respectively) possess electron-shuttling (ES) characteristics that allow herbal medicines to treat COVID-19 via (1) reversible scavenging of ROS to lessen inflammation; (2) inhibition of viral proteins; and (3) targeting of immunomodulatory pathways to stimulate the immune response according to network pharmacology.
Keywords

Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Topics: Traditional medicine Language: English Journal: J Taiwan Inst Chem Eng Year: 2023 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: J.jtice.2023.104898

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Prognostic study Topics: Traditional medicine Language: English Journal: J Taiwan Inst Chem Eng Year: 2023 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: J.jtice.2023.104898