Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Sep 2022)

Arctium lappa leaves based on network pharmacology and experimental validation attenuate atherosclerosis by targeting the AMPK-mediated PPARG/LXRα pathway

  • Mengmeng Wang,
  • Bingdi Cui,
  • Man Gong,
  • Qiuyan Liu,
  • Xingxu Zhuo,
  • Jiangnan Lv,
  • Lianhe Yang,
  • Xiaoqian Liu,
  • Zhimin Wang,
  • Liping Dai

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 153
p. 113503

Abstract

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Arctium lappa (A. lappa) leaves are widely used in various traditional Chinese herbal formulae to ameliorate atherosclerosis (AS) and its complications such as stroke; however, there is no literature reporting the anti-atherosclerotic effect and mechanism of A. lappa leaves thus far. In the present study, we used network pharmacology and molecular docking approaches to examine the protective effect and potential mechanism of A. lappa leaves against AS in vivo and in vitro. From the network pharmacology, PPARG, HMGCR and SREBF2 were identified as the core targets of A. lappa leaves against AS. Further enrichment analyses of GO and KEGG pathways suggested that A. lappa leaves might play an anti-AS role by regulating metabolic processes and PPAR signalling pathways. The results of molecular docking experiment revealed that the major components of A. lappa leaves interacted with cholesterol efflux-regulating core proteins (PPARG, LXRα, ABCA1, and ABCG1), AMPK and SIRT1. Both in vivo and in vitro experimental results demonstrated that treatment with A. lappa leaves significantly lowered TC and LDL-C, increased HDL-C, and reduced cholesterol accumulation in the liver and aorta of the AS rat model and the foam cell model. Importantly, both in vivo and in vitro experimental results demonstrated that A. lappa leaves regulate the activity of the PPARG/LXRα signalling and AMPK/SIRT1 signalling pathways. Moreover, after treatment with the AMPK inhibitor Compound C in vitro, the improvement induced by A. lappa leaves was significantly reversed. In conclusion, A. lappa leaves attenuated AS-induced cholesterol accumulation by targeting the AMPK-mediated PPARG/LXRα pathway and promoting cholesterol efflux.

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