Abstract

BackgroundIn traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical practice, TCM syndromes help to understand human homeostasis and guide individualized treatment. However, the TCM syndrome changes with disease progression, of which the scientific basis and mechanism remain unclear.MethodsTo demonstrate the underlying mechanism of dynamic changes in the TCM syndrome, we applied a dynamic network biomarker (DNB) algorithm to obtain the DNBs of changes in the TCM syndrome, based on the transcriptomic data of patients with chronic hepatitis B and typical TCM syndromes, including healthy controls and patients with liver-gallbladder dampness-heat syndrome (LGDHS), liver-depression spleen-deficiency syndrome (LDSDS), and liver-kidney yin-deficiency syndrome (LKYDS). The DNB model exploits collective fluctuations and correlations of the observed genes, then diagnoses the critical state.ResultsOur results showed that the DNBs of TCM syndromes were comprised of 52 genes and the tipping point occurred at the LDSDS stage. Meanwhile, there were numerous differentially expressed genes between LGDHS and LKYDS, which highlighted the drastic changes before and after the tipping point, implying the 52 DNBs could serve as early-warning signals of the upcoming change in the TCM syndrome. Next, we validated DNBs by cytokine profiling and isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ). The results showed that PLG (plasminogen) and coagulation factor XII (F12) were significantly expressed during the progression of TCM syndrome from LGDHS to LKYDS.ConclusionsThis study provides a scientific understanding of changes in the TCM syndrome. During this process, the cytokine system was involved all the time. The DNBs PLG and F12 were confirmed to significantly change during TCM-syndrome progression and indicated a potential value of DNBs in auxiliary diagnosis of TCM syndrome in CHB.Trial registration Identifier: NCT03189992. Registered on June 4, 2017. Retrospectively registered (http://www.clinicaltrials.gov)

Highlights

  • In traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical practice, TCM syndromes help to understand human homeostasis and guide individualized treatment

  • General information of patients and differentially expressed genes of Chronic hepatitis B (CHB)‐TCM syndromes A total of 244 participants were enrolled in this study, including 73 with Liver-gallbladder dampness-heat syndrome (LGDHS), 73 liver-depression spleen-deficiency syndrome (LDSDS), 70 liver-kidney yin-deficiency syndrome (LKYDS), and 28 healthy volunteers (Additional file 1: Table S1)

  • The distribution of liver function indexes showed no significant difference in patients with the three typical TCM syndromes

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Summary

Introduction

In traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) clinical practice, TCM syndromes help to understand human homeostasis and guide individualized treatment. The TCM syndrome changes with disease progression, of which the scientific basis and mechanism remain unclear. TCM treatments for HBV-related diseases, especially when combined with Western medicine, have promising effects [6, 7]. Liver-gallbladder dampness-heat syndrome (LGDHS), liver-depression spleen-deficiency syndrome (LDSDS), and liver-kidney yin-deficiency syndrome (LKYDS) are typical TCM syndromes for CHB diseases. They represent excess, excessdeficiency mingled, and deficiency TCM syndromes, respectively, which are widely used in disease diagnosis. Various studies have shown that the reductionist approach of Western medicine is not suitable for the scientific basis of TCM syndromes [11, 12]. By means of phenotype and systems biology, the holistic study of TCM has become a very popular research topic in modern science

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