Abstract

According to the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) system, Chinese herbal medicines (HMs) can be divided into four categories: hot, warm, cold, and cool. A cool nature usually is categorized as a cold nature, and a warm nature is classified as a hot nature. However, the detectable characteristics of the gene expression profile associated with the cold and hot properties have not been studied. To address this question, a strategy for the cross-species annotation of conserved genes was established in the present study by using transcriptome data of 20 HMs with cold and hot properties. Functional enrichment analysis was performed on group-specific expressed genes inferred from the functional genome of the reference species (i.e., Arabidopsis). Results showed that metabolic pathways relevant to chrysoeriol, luteolin, paniculatin, and wogonin were enriched for cold-specific genes, and pathways of inositol, heptadecane, lauric acid, octanoic acid, hexadecanoic acid, and pentadecanoic acid were enriched for hot-specific genes. Six functional modules were identified in the HMs with the cold property: nucleotide biosynthetic process, peptidy-L-cysteine S-palmitoylation, lipid modification, base-excision repair, dipeptide transport, and response to endoplasmic reticulum stress. For the hot HMs, another six functional modules were identified: embryonic meristem development, embryonic pattern specification, axis specification, regulation of RNA polymerase II transcriptional preinitiation complex assembly, mitochondrial RNA modification, and cell redox homeostasis. The research provided a new insight into HMs’ cold and hot properties from the perspective of the gene expression profile of plants.

Highlights

  • In the system of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), Yin–Yang theory is one of the central theories, which is used to explain how the world and body work

  • Up to January 01, 2018, 159 articles related to herbal medicines (HMs) and transcriptome were identified (Supplementary Table S1)

  • Theories in cold and hot properties of HMs have become a topic of interest and been researched from different aspects during these years

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Summary

Introduction

In the system of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), Yin–Yang theory is one of the central theories, which is used to explain how the world and body work. Yin and Yang represent the two ends of a spectrum like cold–hot, female–male, and inside–outside. When this concept is applied to the human body, Yin and Yang are linked to different parts or organs of the body or one’s feeling of cold and hot (Gu and Pei, 2017). The breaking of balance gives rise to different syndromes, which can be classified as “cold” syndromes and “hot” syndromes. These two types of syndromes therapeutically direct the use of Chinese herbal medicines (HMs) in TCM (Li et al, 2007). The cold and hot properties are the important medicinal properties of HMs in TCM theory

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