1.Research on Chinese medicine pairs (II)--Their data mining.
Er-Xin SHANG ; Wen-Lin LI ; Liang YE ; Wei ZHOU ; Yu-Ping TANG ; Xin-Sheng FAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2013;38(24):4191-4195
Data mining technology has become a powerful tool in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) research. In this paper, based on the principle and basic requirements of data mining, the mining methods and procedures were described. And then the application of data mining technology in Chinese medicine pair research was classified and summarized, such as the compatibility characters, characteristic pairs, dosage-effect relationship and property compatibility, which provide the direction and data base for modern research of Chinese medicine pair.
Cluster Analysis
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Data Mining
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methods
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Drug Interactions
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Drug Prescriptions
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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methods
2.Analysis and identification of water soluble components of water buffalo horn.
Rui LIU ; Jin-ao DUAN ; Hao WU ; Pei LIU ; Er-xin SHANG ; Da-wei QIAN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2015;50(5):594-598
This study is to analyze and identify the water soluble components of water buffalo horn (Bubali Cornu, WBH), and also establish a method for investigating these components. Shotgun proteomic analysis identified proteins in WBH aqueous extraction: keratin, collagen, desmoglein, etc. Ultrafiltration and LC-MS/MS were used to separate and identify the peptides in WBH aqueous extract, as a result, identified peptides were mainly derived from nonspecific degradation products of keratin and collagen, which including C-terminal peptides and non C-terminal peptides. Hypoxanthine, uridine, guanosine, and adenosine were identified by comparing with the standards. The strategy in present study could be used in analyzing water soluble components of animal horn derived TCM. It provides a reference for investigation of the material basis of animal horn derived TCM.
Animals
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Buffaloes
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Chromatography, Liquid
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Guanosine
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Horns
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chemistry
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Hypoxanthine
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Mass Spectrometry
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Peptides
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Proteomics
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Tandem Mass Spectrometry
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Uridine
3.Study on material base of Carthamus tinctorius with antioxidant effect based on selective knock-out.
Lin-Yan WANG ; Yu-Ping TANG ; Xin LIU ; Ya-Hui GE ; Shu-Jiao LI ; Er-Xin SHANG ; Jin-Ao DUAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2014;39(7):1285-1289
OBJECTIVETo establish a method for studying efficacious materials of traditional Chinese medicines from an overall perspective.
METHODCarthamus tinctorius was taken the example. Its major components were depleted by preparing liquid chromatography. Afterwards, the samples with major components depleted were evaluated for their antioxidant effect, so as to compare and analyze the major efficacious materials of C. tinctorius with antioxidant activity and the contributions.
RESULTSeven major components were depleted from C. tinctorius samples, and six of them were identified with MS data and control comparison. After all of the samples including depleted materials are compared and evaluated for their antioxidant effect, the findings showed that hydroxysafflor yellow A, anhydrosafflor yellow B and 6-hydroxykaempferol-3, 6-di-O-glucoside-7-O-glucuronide were the major efficacious materials.
CONCLUSIONThis study explored a novel and effective method for studying efficacious materials of traditional Chinese medicines. Through this method, we could explain the direct and indirect contributions of different components to the efficacy of traditional Chinese medicines, and make the efficacious material expression of traditional Chinese medicines clearer.
Alkalies ; chemistry ; Antioxidants ; chemistry ; Carthamus tinctorius ; chemistry ; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; chemistry ; Glucosides ; chemistry ; Mass Spectrometry
4.Study on incompatibility of traditional Chinese medicines.
Xin-sheng FAN ; Jin-ao DUAN ; Hao-ming HUA ; Da-wei QIAN ; Er-xin SHANG ; Jian-ming GUO
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2015;40(8):1630-1634
The incompatibility of traditional Chinese medicines is related to the clinical medication safety, so has attracted wide attentions from the public. With the deepening of studies on the incompatibility of traditional Chinese medicines represented by 18 incompatible herbs, the incompatibility of theory traditional Chinese medicines has raised to new heights. From the origin of incompatibility theory of traditional Chinese medicines, relationship of herbs, harms of incompatible herbs and principle of prevention to toxic effects of specific incompatible medicines, the innovation and development of the traditional Chinese medicine incompatibility theory was explored. Structurally, the incompatibility of traditional Chinese medicines refers to the opposition of two herbs based on seven emotions and clinical experience. The combination of incompatible herbs may lead to human harms, especially latent harm and inefficacy of intervention medicines. The avoidance of the combination of incompatible herbs and the consideration of both symptoms and drug efficacy are the basic method to prevent adverse reactions. The recent studies have revealed five characteristics of incompatible herbs. Toxicity potentiation, toxication, efficacy reduction and inefficacy are the four manifestations of the incompatible relations. The material changes can reflect the effects of toxicity potentiation and toxication of opposite herbs. The accumulation of toxicity and metabolic changes are the basis for latent harms. The antagonistic effect of main efficacies and the coexistence of positive and negative effects are the distinctive part of the incompatibility. The connotation of incompatible herbs plays an important role in the innovation of the traditional Chinese medicine incompatibility theory.
Drug Incompatibility
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Drug Therapy
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history
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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chemistry
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history
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pharmacology
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History, Ancient
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Humans
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Medicine in Literature
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
5.Application of stochastic resonance to quantitative analysis of weak chromatographic signal of phenazopyridine in human plasma.
Yan-Wei WU ; Bing-Ren XIANG ; Er-Xin SHANG ; Wei ZHANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2005;40(7):668-672
AIMTo apply stochastic resonance algorithm (SRA) to quantitative analysis of weak chromatographic signal, which was embedded in the noise.
METHODSBased on the theory of stochastic resonance (SR), a simple and effective SRA has been established to improve analytical detection limits of chromatographic analysis, which apply to enhance the signal to noise ratio by the optimization of the parameters and Runge-Kutta method, was established. The method was used to quantitative analysis of phenazopyridine in human plasma by HPLC/UV. Meanwhile this method is compared with HPLC/MS.
RESULTSBy experimental chromatographic data sets, an excellent quantitative relationship between concentrations of phenazopyridine and their responses had been obtained. The concentration of phenazopyridine in plasma determined by HPLC/UV with SRA and HPLC/MS showed that there was no significant difference (P > 0.05) between the two methods.
CONCLUSIONThe new method was feasible.
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ; methods ; Humans ; Mass Spectrometry ; Noise ; Phenazopyridine ; blood ; Sensory Thresholds ; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ; Stochastic Processes
6.Comparative analysis of the promoting blood effects of the combination of different proportions of danggui and honghua by the principal component analysis and multi-attribute comprehensive index methods.
Shu-Jiao LI ; Wei-Xia LI ; Yu-Ping TANG ; Juan SHEN ; Er-Xin SHANG ; Jian-Ming GUO ; Jin-Ao DUAN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2014;49(9):1304-1309
The combination of Danggui and Honghua (GH) is a popular herb pair commonly used in clinic for the treatment of blood stasis syndrome in China. To evaluate the activating blood circulation and dissipating blood stasis effects of the combination of different proportions of Danggui and Honghua on acute blood stasis rats, and optimize the proportion of GH to have the best activating blood circulation and dissipating blood stasis effect. Acute blood stasis rat model was induced by subcutaneous injection of adrenaline and ice water bath. The blood stasis rats were administrated intragastrically with GH (1 : 0, 4 : 1, 2 : 1, 3 : 2, 1 : 1, 2 : 3, 1: 2, 1 : 4 and 0 : 1) extracts. The whole blood viscosity (WBV), plasma viscosity (PV), and high shear whole blood relative index (HSWBRI), low shear whole blood relative index (LSWBRI), and erythrocyte aggregation index (EAI) were tested to observe the effects of GH on hemorheology of blood stasis rats. And the maximum aggregation induced by adenosine diphosphate (ADP) was tested to observe the effect of GH on platelet aggregation index of blood stasis rats. In addition, the prothrombin time (PT), thrombin time (TT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and plasma fibrinogen (FIB) were tested to observe the effects of GH on blood coagulation function of blood stasis rats. Then principal component analysis and multi-attribute comprehensive index methods were both used to comprehensively evaluate the total activating blood circulation and dissipating blood stasis effects of GH. The results showed that the hemorheological indexes and coagulation parameters of model group both had significant differences with normal group. Compared with model group, GH (1 : 0, 4 : 1, 2: 1, 3 : 2, 1 : 1, 2 : 3, 1 : 2, 1 : 4 and 0 : 1) could improve all the blood hemorheology indexes and regulate part indexes of blood coagulation function and platelet aggregation in acute blood stasis rats. Based on principal component analysis and multi-attribute comprehensive index methods, GH 1 : 1 and GH 3 : 2 both had the best effect of blood circulation and dissipating blood stasis, and the effect of GH 1 : 1 was slightly better than GH 3 : 2. These results suggest that GH could obviously ameliorate the abnormality of hemorheology and blood coagulation function in acute blood stasis rats. The optimized proportion of GH was consistent with regulations of medicine usage that GH 1 : 1 had the highest frequency used in traditional Chinese formulae. It could provide scientific basis for more effective application of the compatibility between Danggui and Honghua in modern clinic medicine.
Animals
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Blood Coagulation
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Blood Viscosity
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Carthamus tinctorius
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China
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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pharmacology
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Erythrocyte Aggregation
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Hemorheology
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Partial Thromboplastin Time
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Platelet Aggregation
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Principal Component Analysis
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Prothrombin Time
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Thrombin Time
7.The action mechanisms of Morus alba leaves extract for the treatment of diabetes based on plasma metabolomics.
Tao JI ; Li-li ZHANG ; Xiao-chen HUANG ; Shu-lan SU ; Zhen OUYANG ; Zhen-hua ZHU ; Sheng GUO ; Er-xin SHANG ; Da-wei QIAN ; Jin-ao DUAN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2015;50(7):830-835
In order to evaluate the effect and mechanism of the mulberry leaf alkaloid, flavones, and polysaccharide intervention on diabetes, the overall metabolite profiling characteristics for the plasma of diabetic mouse was performed by using an ultra-performance liquid chromatography/electrospray-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-ESI-MS). The 8 potential biomarkers were found in diabetic mice plasma based on the data of MS/MS characteristics obtained from the UPLC-OrbitrapMS analysis, which mainly involved in sphingolipids, amino acid metabolic pathway. The principal component analysis showed that the normal group and model group were obviously distinguished and implied that metabolic disturbance was happened in diabetic mice plasma. The extracts of mulberry leaf flavonoids, polysaccharide, alkaloid had exhibited the effects of callback function for diabetic mice through regulating the amino acid metabolism and sphingolipid metabolism.
Alkaloids
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chemistry
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Amino Acids
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metabolism
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Animals
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Biomarkers
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blood
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Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
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Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental
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drug therapy
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Flavones
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chemistry
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Flavonoids
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chemistry
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Metabolic Networks and Pathways
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Metabolomics
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Mice
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Morus
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chemistry
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Plant Leaves
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chemistry
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Sphingolipids
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metabolism
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Tandem Mass Spectrometry
8.The interaction between ononin and human intestinal bacteria.
Wei ZHANG ; Shu JIANG ; Da-Wei QIAN ; Er-Xin SHANG ; Han-Liang GUAN ; Hao REN ; Zhen-Hua ZHU ; Jin-Ao DUAN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2014;49(8):1162-1168
The study aims to screen the ability of the bacteria to metabolize ononin and assess the effect of ononin on the intestinal bacteria. Fresh human fecal sample was obtained from a healthy volunteer, diluted serially in sterile water and sixty-nine different bacterial colonies were picked out ultimately. UPLC-Q-TOF/MS with automated data analysis software (MetaboLynx) was applied to fast analysis of ononin metabolites. Furthermore, an E(max) precision microplate reader was employed to determine the growth situation of Enterococcous sp., Enterobacter sp., Lactobacilli sp., and Bifidobacteria sp. Results indicated that hydrogenation, demethylation, hydroxylation and deglycosylation were the major metabolic pathways of ononin by human intestinal bacteria in vitro. Ononin can inhibit the growth of pathogen such as Enterococcus sp., Enterobacter sp. and can promote the growth of probiotics such as Bifidobacteria sp. and Lactobacilli sp. This study suggested that intestinal bacteria have the metabolic effects of ononin and the biotransformation was completed by different bacteria. And ononin can affect the balance of intestinal flora and the degree of influence varies depending on the bacterial species and the concentration of ononin.
Bacteria
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metabolism
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Biotransformation
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Feces
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microbiology
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Glucosides
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metabolism
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Humans
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Intestines
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microbiology
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Isoflavones
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metabolism
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Metabolic Networks and Pathways
9.Determination of loratadine in human plasma by HPLC with fluorescence detector and study on its bioavailability.
Xiao-jie XU ; Er-xin SHANG ; Fu-rong QIU ; Guo-guang MAO ; Bing-ren XIANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2004;39(2):123-126
AIMTo establish an HPLC-fluorescence method for determination of loratadine in human plasma and evaluate its relative bioavailability.
METHODSAn Alltech-C18 column and a mobile phase of acetonitrile-water-glacial acetic acid-triethylamine (90:100:6:0.15) were used. The fluorescence detector was set at Ex 274 nm, Em 450 nm. The flow rate was 1 mL.min-1.
RESULTSThe calibration curve was linear over a concentration range of 0.2-30 micrograms.L-1. The limit of quantification was 0.2 microgram.L-1. The average method recoveries varied from 96% to 98%. The results showed AUC, Tmax, Cmax and T1/2 beta between the testing tablets, testing capsules and reference tablets had no significant difference (P > 0.05). Relative bioavailabilities were 107% +/- 17% and 100% +/- 14% respectively.
CONCLUSIONThe three formulations were bioequivalent.
Area Under Curve ; Biological Availability ; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ; methods ; Fluorescence ; Histamine H1 Antagonists, Non-Sedating ; blood ; pharmacokinetics ; Humans ; Loratadine ; blood ; pharmacokinetics ; Male
10.Study on Chinese medicine pairs (V)--Their modern research strategies and approaches.
Wei-Xia LI ; Yu-Ping TANG ; Shu-Lan SU ; Pei LIU ; Jian-Ming GUO ; Er-Xin SHANG ; Da-Wei QIAN ; Jin-Ao DUAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2013;38(24):4208-4213
Along with progress of modern science and technology, human is utilizing natural resources and their inherent law more effectively and more efficiently according to their own purposes. Chinese medicine pair (CMP) is relatively fixed combination of two TCMs which was proven to be effective in clinical application. CMP has its inner specification, and it is an intermediate point between single herb and many TCM formulae. With the aid of modern science and technology, and by means of choosing appropriate strategies and approaches, the compatibility rules of CMP might be revealed, which will be significant to develop the compatibility theory of TCM formulae and create modern TCM new drugs.
Animals
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Clinical Trials as Topic
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Drug Interactions
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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methods
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Research Design
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Systems Biology