Abstract

Meconopsis quintuplinervia Regel (MQR) belongs to the opium poppy tree plant species, and it has heat purging, detoxification, diuretic, anti-inflammatory, and analgesic effects. MQR has liver-protective properties and can alleviate liver heat. Therefore, this study aimed to observe the effect of MQR extract on acute alcoholic liver injury in mice and explore the mechanism of action of ethyl acetate extract of MQR (MQR-E) on alcohol-induced liver injury in combination with the network pharmacology. To induce acute alcoholic liver injury, 52% of edible wine was administered at 12mL/kg for 14 days. The pharmacodynamic results were used to screen the active site. MQR-E composition was analyzed based on UPLC-Q-TOF-MS, and relevant MQR-E and alcoholic liver disease (ALD) targets were screened using an online database. Then, Venn analysis of drug and disease-related targets was performed to obtain cross-targets. We investigated the protein-protein interaction network (PPI) of overlapping targets, the core targets were screened using the STRING database, and the DAVID database was chosen for GO and KEGG enrichment analysis of the central targets. Each of the four MQR extracts ameliorated alcoholic liver injury to varying degrees; the best results were achieved with MQR-E. MQR-E reduces liver index, serum transaminases, and fat accumulation, and attenuates ethanol-induced histopathological changes. The activities of hepatic superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GSH-PX) were increased, the content of malondialdehyde (MDA) was significantly reduced compared to the EtOH group, and MQR-E effectively mitigated the oxidative stress induced by ethanol in the liver. Thirty-six compounds were identified, and flavonoids were the most abundant. PPI network topology analysis was employed to assess 32 core targets: IL-6, TNF, STAT3, PPARA, and other inflammation and lipid metabolism related genes. Pathway analysis of GO and KEGG enrichment showed that the regulation of inflammatory factors and lipid metabolism were primarily involved. We concluded that MQR-E had protective effects against acute alcohol-induced liver injury in mice, and the mechanism could be linked to the inhibition of lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress. The mechanism by which MQR-E ameliorated ALD primarily involved regulating inflammatory factors and lipid metabolism based on the prediction of the network pharmacology.

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