Abstract

Liver disease is a major cause of illness and death worldwide. In China, liver diseases, primarily alcoholic and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and viral hepatitis, affect approximately 300 million people, resulting in a major impact on the global burden of liver diseases. The use of Liuweiwuling (LWWL), a traditional Chinese medicine formula, approved by the Chinese Food and Drug Administration for decreasing aminotransferase levels induced by different liver diseases. Our previous study indicated a part of the material basis and mechanisms of LWWL in the treatment of hepatic fibrosis. However, knowledge of the materials and molecular mechanisms of LWWL in the treatment of liver diseases remains limited. Using pharmacokinetic and network pharmacology methods, this study demonstrated that the active components of LWWL were involved in the treatment mechanism against liver diseases and exerted anti-apoptosis and anti-inflammatory effects. Furthermore, esculetin, luteolin, schisandrin A and schisandrin B may play an important role by exerting anti-inflammatory and hepatoprotective effects in vitro. Esculeti and luteolin dose-dependently inhibited H2O2-induced cell apoptosis, and luteolin also inhibited the NF-κB signaling pathway in bone marrow-derived macrophages. schisandrin A and B inhibited the release of ROS in acetaminophen (APAP)-induced acute liver injury in vitro. Moreover, LWWL active ingredients protect against APAP-induced acute liver injury in mice. The four active ingredients may inhibit oxidative stress or inflammation to exert hepatoprotective effect. In conclusion, our results showed that the novel component combination of LWWL can protect against APAP-induced acute liver injury by inhibiting cell apoptosis and exerting anti-inflammatory effects.

Highlights

  • Liver diseases lead to severe public health problems owing to their high prevalence worldwide and poor long-term clinical outcomes, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (Wang et al, 2014)

  • As a result, apigenin, esculetin, gomisin N, schisanhenol, schisandrin A, schisandrin B, anwulignan, schisantherin A, schisantherin B, specnuezhenide, schisandrin, luteolin, quinic acid, and curcumenol were identified according to the described chromatographic conditions

  • This study investigated whether the 14 active constituents of LWWL exert protective effects against H2O2-induced oxidative damages; we found that esculetin and luteolin could dose-dependently inhibit H2O2induced cell apoptosis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Liver diseases lead to severe public health problems owing to their high prevalence worldwide and poor long-term clinical outcomes, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (Wang et al, 2014). Our previous study indicated that LWWL could attenuate hepatic fibrosis via the modulation of TGF-β1 and NF-κB signaling pathways in rat models, based on bile duct ligation (BDL)and CCl4-induced hepatic fibrosis (Liu et al, 2018a; Liu et al, 2018b). It is still unclear whether the underlying mechanisms and core signaling pathways mediate the multilinked and multi-targeted effects of LWWL against liver diseases

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call