Abstract

Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi (SBG) has been widely used as medical plant in East Asia with remarkable anti-cancer activity. However, the underlying mechanisms are still confused. In this study, an integrated analysis was conducted to screen topoisomerase I (topo I) inhibitors from flavonoids of SBG and investigate the anti-cancer mechanisms, containing bioaffinity ultrafiltration UPLC-ESI-TripleTOF-MS/MS, molecular docking, and multiple complex networks. The SBG extract exhibited notable cytotoxic activity on Hela cells. Five flavonoids were identified as potential topo I inhibitors, including skullcapflavone II, wogonin, chrysin, oroxylin A, and tenaxin I. Their ESI-MS/MS spectra showed that RDA reaction and neutral molecule loss were the main fragment patterns. Docking results demonstrated that π–π interaction and the formation of hydrogen bond contributed most to their binding with topo I. The selected compounds, related target proteins and pathways were integrated into target-based multiple complex networks, which consisted of three subnetworks. Statistical and topological analysis of these networks revealed a series of characteristics, including scale-free property with power-law degree distribution, Poisson degree distribution, and small-world property. Chrysin, wogonin, and oroxylin A exhibited as main active components with much higher degree values. Chemical carcinogenesis-receptor activation (hsa05207) was considered as critical pathway due to remarkable centrality indexes. Additionally, potential synergistic effect of wogonin and chrysin was observed on the conversion of supercoiled DNA to relaxed forms. These results improved current understanding of flavonoid-rich plants on the treatment of cancer. Moreover, the multi-disciplinary approach provided a new strategy for the research of natural products from medical plants.

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