Abstract

Investigating the pharmacology is key to the modernization of Chinese Medicine (CM) formulas. However, identifying which are the active compound(s) of CM formulas, which biological entities they target, and through which signaling pathway(s) they act to modify disease symptoms, are still difficult tasks for researchers, even when equipped with an arsenal of advanced modern technologies. Multiple approaches, including network pharmacology, pharmaco-genomics, -proteomics, and -metabolomics, have been developed to study the pharmacology of CM formulas. They fall into two general categories in terms of how they tackle a problem: bottom-up and top-down. In this article, we compared these two different approaches in several dimensions by using the case of MaZiRenWan (MZRW, also known as Hemp Seed Pill), a CM herbal formula for functional constipation. Multiple hypotheses are easy to be proposed in the bottom-up approach (e.g. network pharmacology); but these hypotheses are usually false positives and hard to be tested. In contrast, it is hard to suggest hypotheses in the top-down approach (e.g. pharmacometabolomics); however, once a hypothesis is proposed, it is much easier to be tested. Merging of these two approaches could results in a powerful approach, which could be the new paradigm for the pharmacological study of CM formulas.

Highlights

  • Unknown active constituents and unclear mechanismof-actions have sparked criticism when Chinese medicine (CM) formula is getting more popular today [1, 2]

  • We used several of these methodologies to investigate the pharmacology of a CM formula MaZiRenWan (MZRW, known as Hemp Seed Pill) [20, 21]

  • We demonstrated that MZRW is significantly better than placebo in improvement of bowel movement during drug treatment, while such effect is more sustainable than placebo during 8 weeks follow-up, in the randomized, placebo-controlled clinical study with 120 functional constipation (FC) patients [26]

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Summary

Introduction

Unknown active constituents and unclear mechanismof-actions have sparked criticism when Chinese medicine (CM) formula is getting more popular today [1, 2]. *Correspondence: bianzxiang@gmail.com 2 Hong Kong Chinese Medicine Clinical Study Centre, Hong Kong Baptist University, Room 307, Jockey Club School of Chinese Medicine, 7 Baptist University Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China Full list of author information is available at the end of the article target(s) it acts on, and which disease pathway(s) it alters (Fig. 1a). We will compare these two distinct approaches in the investigation of pharmacology of one CM formula, MZRW for functional constipation (FC).

Results
Conclusion
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