Frontiers in Pharmacology (Jun 2023)

Metabolic changes in the plasma of mild Alzheimer’s disease patients treated with Hachimijiogan

  • Mosaburo Kainuma,
  • Shinobu Kawakatsu,
  • Jun-Dal Kim,
  • Shinji Ouma,
  • Osamu Iritani,
  • Ken-Ichiro Yamashita,
  • Tomoyuki Ohara,
  • Shigeki Hirano,
  • Shiro Suda,
  • Tadanori Hamano,
  • Sotaro Hieda,
  • Masaaki Yasui,
  • Aoi Yoshiiwa,
  • Seiji Shiota,
  • Masaya Hironishi,
  • Kenji Wada-Isoe,
  • Daiki Sasabayashi,
  • Sho Yamasaki,
  • Masayuki Murata,
  • Kouta Funakoshi,
  • Kouji Hayashi,
  • Norimichi Shirafuji,
  • Hirohito Sasaki,
  • Yoshinori Kajimoto,
  • Yukiko Mori,
  • Michio Suzuki,
  • Hidefumi Ito,
  • Kenjiro Ono,
  • Yoshio Tsuboi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1203349
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Background: Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most prevalent form of dementia, is a debilitating, progressive neurodegeneration. Amino acids play a wide variety of physiological and pathophysiological roles in the nervous system, and their levels and disorders related to their synthesis have been related to cognitive impairment, the core feature of AD. Our previous multicenter trial showed that hachimijiogan (HJG), a traditional Japanese herbal medicine (Kampo), has an adjuvant effect for Acetylcholine estelase inhibitors (AChEIs) and that it delays the deterioration of the cognitive dysfunction of female patients with mild AD. However, there are aspects of the molecular mechanism(s) by which HJG improves cognitive dysfunction that remain unclear.Objectives: To elucidate through metabolomic analysis the mechanism(s) of HJG for mild AD based on changes in plasma metabolites.Methods: Sixty-seven patients with mild AD were randomly assigned to either an HJG group taking HJG extract 7.5 g/day in addition to AChEI or to a control group treated only with AChEI (HJG:33, Control:34). Blood samples were collected before, 3 months, and 6 months after the first drug administration. Comprehensive metabolomic analyses of plasma samples were done by optimized LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS methods. The web-based software MetaboAnalyst 5.0 was used for partial least square-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) to visualize and compare the dynamics of changes in the concentrations of the identified metabolites.Results: The VIP (Variable Importance in Projection) score of the PLS-DA analysis of female participants revealed a significantly higher increase in plasma metabolite levels after HJG administration for 6 months than was seen in the control group. In univariate analysis, the aspartic acid level of female participants showed a significantly higher increase from baseline after HJG administration for 6 months when compared with the control group.Conclusion: Aspartic acid was a major contributor to the difference between the female HJG and control group participants of this study. Several metabolites were shown to be related to the mechanism of HJG effectiveness for mild AD.

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