4.7 Article

Systematic Analysis of the Molecular Mechanisms of Cold and Hot Properties of Herbal Medicines

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11070997

Keywords

phytomedicine; cold pain; thermal hypersensitivity; norepinephrine; thermogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. research program of the Korea Institute of Oriental Medicine [KSN2023120]
  2. National Research Council of Science & Technology (NST), Republic of Korea [KSN2023120] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Effective treatments for temperature-related symptoms are limited, and the molecular mechanisms of the hot and cold effects of traditional herbal medicines are not fully understood. This study aimed to systematically elucidate the molecular mechanisms of herbal medicines' hot and cold properties through an unbiased large-scale investigation of herbal ingredients, target genes, and induced transcriptome signatures. The results provide novel connections between herbal ingredients, target genes, and pathways, which may contribute to the development of pharmacological treatment strategies for temperature-related pain using medicinal plants.
Effective treatments for patients experiencing temperature-related symptoms are limited. The hot and cold effects of traditional herbal medicines have been utilized to treat and manage these symptoms, but their molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. Previous studies with arbitrarily selected herbs and ingredients may have produced biased results. Here, we aim to systematically elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the hot and cold properties of herbal medicines through an unbiased large-scale investigation of herbal ingredients, their target genes, and the transcriptome signatures induced by them. Using data regarding 243 herbs retrieved from two herbal medicine databases, we statistically identify (R)-Linalool, (-)-alpha-pinene, peruviol, (L)-alpha-terpineol, and cymol as five new hot-specific ingredients that share a common target, a norepinephrine transporter. However, no significant ingredients are cold-specific. We also statistically identify 14 hot- and 8 cold-specific new target genes. Pathway enrichment analysis of hot-specific target genes reveals the associated pathways including neurotransmitter reuptake, cold-induced thermogenesis, blood pressure regulation, adrenergic receptor signaling, and cation symporter activity. Cold-specific target genes are associated with the steroid pathway. Transcriptome analysis also shows that hot herbs are more strongly associated with coagulation and synaptic transmission than cold herbs. Our results, obtained from novel connections between herbal ingredients, target genes, and pathways, may contribute to the development of pharmacological treatment strategies for temperature-related pain using medicinal plants.

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