Abstract
Bubali Cornu (water buffalo horn, WBH) has been used for thousands of years in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) as an effective treatment for heat. In the present study, we have carried out a metabolomics profiling study on plasma and urine samples to explore potential biomarkers and determine how WBH exerts its antipyretic effects in yeast-induced pyrexia at a metabolomic level. Ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-Q-TOF-MS), together with multivariate statistical analysis, was used to detect and identify potential biomarkers associated with pyrexia and with WBH treatment. In total, sixteen endogenous metabolites were identified in plasma samples and twenty-one metabolites were detected in urine samples. The biomarkers identified in this study, using metabolic pathway analysis (MetPA), are involved in glycerophospholipid, arachidonic acid, amino acid, sphingolipid, and purine metabolism, all of which are disturbed in rats with pyrexia. As a result, WBH affect arachidonic acid metabolism and oxidative stress in yeast-induced pyrexia rats chiefly. The present study determines the important substances underlying the antipyretic efficacy of WBH at a metabolic level. It might pave the way for further investigations into the mechanisms of action of other animal horn-derived traditional Chinese medicines (TCMs).
Highlights
Rhinoceri Asiatici Cornu has been used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for over 2000 years
UPLC-Q-TOF MS base peak intensity (BPI) chromatograms of plasma and urine samples are shown in Figures A and B in S1 File
The time-dependent changes in urine samples are shown in Fig 3, the tendency of WBH treated fever group resemble to normal rats was not significant
Summary
Rhinoceri Asiatici Cornu (rhinoceros horn, RH) has been used in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) for over 2000 years. RH is considered to be indispensable components of a number of remedies and, in recent decades, illegal hunting to satisfy increasing demand has led to drastic reductions in rhinoceros populations [1, 2]. Metabolomics of Antipyretic Effects of Bubali Cornu PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158478 July 6, 2016
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