Abstract

BackgroundShenfu Injection (SFI) has emerged as a prevalent therapeutic intervention in clinical practice for the management of acute pancreatitis (AP). The purpose of this research was to investigate and validate the potential mechanisms of SFI in the treatment of AP through network pharmacology. MethodsNetwork pharmacology was adopted to investigate the potential targets and mechanisms of SFI in the treatment of AP. Molecular docking was employed to evaluate the binding affinity between active components and targets. Single-cell transcriptome analysis was conducted to explore the cell types associated with SFI treatment in AP. In vitro and in vivo models of AP were induced by caerulein. The histopathological changes were observed by HE staining. Cell apoptosis was detected using flow cytometry and Tunel staining. Cell viability was assessed using CCK-8 assay. Western blot and ELISA were used to detect the protein expression and inflammatory cytokines, respectively. ResultsA total of 104 SFI active components were obtained, of which 29 targeted 76 genes. After intersecting with 3370 AP-related genes, 42 SFI treatment AP potential targets were identified. Enrichment analysis revealed that these targets were associated with cell apoptosis, necroptosis, and multiple signal transduction pathways, such as p53, IL-17 and TNF signal pathways, etc. Molecular docking demonstrated that the active components of SFI had good binding affinity with the corresponding targets and the binding ability of NGF and aromadendrene was the strongest. Bioinformatics analysis revealed that SFI treatment in AP is associated with various cell types, including acinar cells, endothelial cells, T cells, dendritic cells, ductal cells, and mesenchymal cells. Furthermore, in vitro experiments demonstrated that SFI induces acinar cell apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner, accompanied by increased expression of cleaved-caspase3/caspase3 and cleaved-caspase8/caspase8 proteins, and inhibition of inflammatory cytokine (TNF-ɑ, IL-1β, and PTGS2) expression. In vivo experiments demonstrated that SFI improved histopathological alterations, reduces inflammation, and promotes apoptosis and the expression of cleaved-casp3 and cleaved-casp8 in AP rats. ConclusionsThis study elucidated the multi-component, multi-target, and multi-cellular characteristics of SFI in the treatment of AP, and confirmed its mechanism of promoting acinar cell apoptosis.

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