Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs

The ancient tradition of taking parts of a plant or preparing plant extracts for treating certain discomforts and maladies has long been lacking a scientific rationale to support its preparation and still widespread use in several parts of the world. In an attempt to address this challenge, we colle...

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Main Authors: Joaquim Olivés, Jordi Mestres
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Pharmacology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01132/full
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spelling doaj-54afcb57f64342bc8ee5015627505d132020-11-24T20:46:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Pharmacology1663-98122019-10-011010.3389/fphar.2019.01132457719Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial HerbsJoaquim Olivés0Jordi Mestres1Jordi Mestres2Research Group on Systems Pharmacology, Research Programme on Biomedical Informatics (GRIB), IMIM Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, Barcelona, SpainResearch Group on Systems Pharmacology, Research Programme on Biomedical Informatics (GRIB), IMIM Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, Barcelona, SpainDepartment of Experimental and Health Sciences, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, SpainThe ancient tradition of taking parts of a plant or preparing plant extracts for treating certain discomforts and maladies has long been lacking a scientific rationale to support its preparation and still widespread use in several parts of the world. In an attempt to address this challenge, we collected and integrated data connecting metabolites, plants, diseases, and proteins. A mechanistic hypothesis is generated when a metabolite is known to be present in a given plant, that plant is known to be used to treat a certain disease, that disease is known to be linked to the function of a given protein, and that protein is finally known or predicted to interact with the original metabolite. The construction of plant–protein networks from mutually connected metabolites and diseases facilitated the identification of plausible mechanisms of action for plants being used to treat analgesia, hypercholesterolemia, diarrhea, catarrh, and cough. Additional concrete examples using both experimentally known and computationally predicted, and subsequently experimentally confirmed, metabolite–protein interactions to close the connection circle between metabolites, plants, diseases, and proteins offered further proof of concept for the validity and scope of the approach to generate mode of action hypotheses for some of the therapeutic uses of remedial herbs.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01132/fullethnopharmacologytraditional medicinenetwork pharmacologymechanism of actionphytochemicalsendogenous metabolites
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joaquim Olivés
Jordi Mestres
Jordi Mestres
spellingShingle Joaquim Olivés
Jordi Mestres
Jordi Mestres
Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
Frontiers in Pharmacology
ethnopharmacology
traditional medicine
network pharmacology
mechanism of action
phytochemicals
endogenous metabolites
author_facet Joaquim Olivés
Jordi Mestres
Jordi Mestres
author_sort Joaquim Olivés
title Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
title_short Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
title_full Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
title_fullStr Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
title_full_unstemmed Closing the Gap Between Therapeutic Use and Mode of Action in Remedial Herbs
title_sort closing the gap between therapeutic use and mode of action in remedial herbs
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Pharmacology
issn 1663-9812
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The ancient tradition of taking parts of a plant or preparing plant extracts for treating certain discomforts and maladies has long been lacking a scientific rationale to support its preparation and still widespread use in several parts of the world. In an attempt to address this challenge, we collected and integrated data connecting metabolites, plants, diseases, and proteins. A mechanistic hypothesis is generated when a metabolite is known to be present in a given plant, that plant is known to be used to treat a certain disease, that disease is known to be linked to the function of a given protein, and that protein is finally known or predicted to interact with the original metabolite. The construction of plant–protein networks from mutually connected metabolites and diseases facilitated the identification of plausible mechanisms of action for plants being used to treat analgesia, hypercholesterolemia, diarrhea, catarrh, and cough. Additional concrete examples using both experimentally known and computationally predicted, and subsequently experimentally confirmed, metabolite–protein interactions to close the connection circle between metabolites, plants, diseases, and proteins offered further proof of concept for the validity and scope of the approach to generate mode of action hypotheses for some of the therapeutic uses of remedial herbs.
topic ethnopharmacology
traditional medicine
network pharmacology
mechanism of action
phytochemicals
endogenous metabolites
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphar.2019.01132/full
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