Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Feb 2022)

Modular Screening Reveals Driver Induced Additive Mechanisms of Baicalin and Jasminoidin on Cerebral Ischemia Therapy

  • Bing Li,
  • Bing Li,
  • Ying Wang,
  • Hao Gu,
  • Yanan Yu,
  • Pengqian Wang,
  • Jun Liu,
  • Yingying Zhang,
  • Yinying Chen,
  • Qikai Niu,
  • Bo Wang,
  • Qiong Liu,
  • Shuang Guan,
  • Yanda Li,
  • Huamin Zhang,
  • Zhong Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.813983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Combination therapy with increased efficacy and reduced toxicity plays a crucial role in treating complex diseases, such as stroke, but it remains an insurmountable barrier to elucidate the mechanisms of synergistic effects. Here, we present a Driver-induced Modular Screening (DiMS) strategy integrated synergistic module and driver gene identification to elucidate the additive mechanisms of Baicalin (BA) and Jasminoidin (JA) on cerebral ischemia (CI) therapy. Based on anti-ischemia genomic networks BA, JA, and their combination (BJ), we obtained 4, 3, and 9 On-modules of BA, JA, and BJ by modular similarity analysis. Compared with the monotherapy groups, four additive modules (Add-module, BJ_Mod-4, 7, 9, and 13), 15 driver genes of BJ were identified by modular similarity and network control methods, and seven driver proteins (PAQR8, RhoA, EMC10, GGA2, VIPR1, FAM120A, and SEMA3F) were validated by animal experiments. The functional analysis found neuroprotective roles of the Add-modules and driver genes, such as the Neurotrophin signaling pathway and FoxO signaling pathway, which may reflect the additive mechanisms of BJ. Moreover, such a DiMS paradigm provides a new angle to explore the synergistic mechanisms of combination therapy and screen multi-targeted drugs for complex diseases.

Keywords