| Literature DB >> 28499205 |
Juan Shen1, Zong-Jin Pu1, Jun Kai1, An Kang1, Yu-Ping Tang2, Li-Li Shang1, Gui-Sheng Zhou1, Zhen-Hua Zhu1, Er-Xin Shang1, Shao-Ping Li3, Yu-Jie Cao1, Wei-Wei Tao1, Shu-Lan Su1, Li Zhang1, Huiping Zhou4, Da-Wei Qian1, Jin-Ao Duan1.
Abstract
Kansui, the root of Euphorbia kansui T.N. Liou ex T.P. Wang (Euphorbiaceae), is a well-known poisonous traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). However, many monographs of TCM indicated that it cannot be co-used with licorice, as kansui-licorice is a typical "eighteen incompatible" medicaments. Our previous studies have indicated that kansui was effective in treating malignant pleural effusion (MPE), and the efficacy could be weakened by the co-use of licorice, even causing serious toxicity at the given ratio. Nevertheless, the actual mechanisms of their dosage-toxicity-efficacy relationship need to be well clarified. The present study aimed to investigate the effect of individual and combined use of kansui and licorice on MPE rats, and explain the underlying mechanisms from a metabolomic perspective. Urine samples were analyzed by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QTOF/MS). Partial least-squares discriminate analysis (PLS-DA) models were built to evaluate the interaction between kansui and licorice. Seven potential biomarkers contribute to the separation of model group and control group were tentatively identified. And selenoamino acid metabolism and nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism with the impact-value 0.31 and 0.24, respectively, were filtered out as the most important metabolic pathways. Kansui and kansui-licorice at a ratio of 4:1 can treat MPE rats by adjusting abnormal metabolic pathways to the normal state, while it may have opposite result with kansui-licorice 1:4. The different influences to the two metabolic pathways may partially explain the dosage-toxicity-efficacy relationship of kansui-licorice with different ratios. The results could offer valuable insights into the compatibility property changes for the two herbs.Entities:
Keywords: Incompatibility; Kansui; Licorice; Malignant pleural effusion; Metabolomics; UHPLC–QTOF/MS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28499205 DOI: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2017.04.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci ISSN: 1570-0232 Impact factor: 3.205