Background: Ge-Gen-Qin-Lian Decoction (GGQLD), a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) formula, has been widely used for ulcerative colitis (UC) in China, but the pharmacological mechanisms remain unclear. This research was designed to clarify the underlying pharmacological mechanism of GGQLD against UC.

Method: In this research, a GGQLD-compound-target-UC network was constructed based on public databases to clarify the relationship between active compounds in GGQLD and potential targets. Gene ontology (GO) and Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (KEGG) pathway enrichment analyses were performed to investigate biological functions associated with potential targets. A protein–protein interaction network was constructed to screen and evaluate hub genes and key active ingredients. Molecular docking was used to verify the activities of binding between hub targets and ingredients.

Results: Finally, 83 potential therapeutic targets and 118 corresponding active ingredients were obtained by network pharmacology. Quercetin, kaempferol, wogonin, baicalein, and naringenin were identified as potential candidate ingredients. GO and KEGG enrichment analyses revealed that GGQLD had anti-inflammatory, antioxidative, and immunomodulatory effects. The effect of GGQLD on UC might be achieved by regulating the balance of cytokines (e.g., IL-6, TNF, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2) in the immune system and inflammation-related pathways, such as the IL-17 pathway and the Th17 cell differentiation pathway. In addition, molecular docking results demonstrated that the main active ingredient, quercetin, exhibited good affinity to hub targets.

Conclusion: This research fully reflects the multicomponent and multitarget characteristics of GGQLD in the treatment of UC. Furthermore, the present study provided new insight into the mechanisms of GGQLD against UC.

Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an idiopathic chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) characterized by persistent inflammation of the entire large intestine that causes abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, and fecal urgency [1]. The incidence of UC, especially in Asia, is increasing in the 21st century [2]. While the etiology of UC is still incompletely elucidated, it is thought to be associated with innate and adaptive immunity, gut barrier function, and pathogen sensing and response [3,4]. The treatment of UC mainly includes medical management and colectomy, but current therapies are limited because a large proportion of patients with UC are resistant or intolerant to standard drug treatments [5,6]. Since dissatisfaction with conventional medication, complementary and alternative therapies, including traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), dietary supplements, probiotics, and mind/body interventions [7,8], are commonly used in patients with UC [9,10]. Among them, the therapeutic efficacy and safety of several TCM formulas in IBD have been shown in some double-blind randomized controlled trials [11,12].

Ge-Gen-Qin-Lian decoction (GGQLD), a well-known TCM formula, was first described in Shang Han Lun written by Zhongjing Zhang [13] and has more than 2000 years of clinical application history in China. GGQLD is composed of four herbs: Gegen (Puerariae lobatae Radix), Huangqin (Scutellariae Radix), Huanglian (Coptidis Rhizoma), and Gancao (Glycyrrhizae Radix), at a ratio of 5:3:3:2 [14]. In the clinic, GGQLD has been commonly used for the treatment of diarrhea [15]. Recently, a meta-analysis including 22 trials involving 2028 patients with UC showed that using GGQLD significantly improved the clinical effectiveness and recurrence rate compared with using Western medicine [16]. However, despite the known therapeutic effects of GGQLD, its pharmacological and molecular mechanisms of action have not been fully elucidated.

Network pharmacology is a part of bioinformatics, integrating bioinformatics, and system medicine. Since network pharmacology can reflect the characteristics of multiple components and targets of TCM, it has been widely used in TCM research and advanced drug discovery in recent years [17–20]. This provides a novel way to clarify the mechanisms of GGQLD that exert therapeutic effects in UC. In the present study, we attempted to undertake a network pharmacology study to unveil the crucial genes and pathways that are involved in the pathogenesis of GGQLD against UC (see Figure 1). These results may provide a new target for the treatment of GGQLD against UC.

The graphical abstract for underlining the pharmacological mechanisms of GGQLD against UC

Figure 1
The graphical abstract for underlining the pharmacological mechanisms of GGQLD against UC
Figure 1
The graphical abstract for underlining the pharmacological mechanisms of GGQLD against UC
Close modal

Construction of the GGQLD chemical ingredient database

All chemical ingredients of each herb in GGQLD were obtained from the Traditional Chinese Medicine Systems Pharmacology Database and Analysis Platform (TCMSP) (https://tcmspw.com/tcmsp.php) [21]. TCMSP is a unique systems pharmacology platform that integrates large-scale structural data (29,384 chemicals in total with 13,144 unique molecules) with manually curated information for all registered herbs in Chinese pharmacopeia [22]. It can also provide ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion)-related property data, such as human oral bioavailability (OB), half-life (HL), drug-likeness (DL), Caco-2 permeability (Caco-2), blood–brain barrier (BBB), and Lipinski’s rule of five (MW, AlogP, TPSA, Hdon, and Hacc) [23].

Drug screening and evaluation

Drug screening and evaluation in GGQLD were mainly identified by OB and DL administered by TCMSP. OB and DL are two important indicators in ADME. DL is a qualitative concept used in drug design for how druglikeness a substance is concerning factors such as bioavailability and helps optimize pharmacokinetic and pharmaceutical properties, such as solubility and chemical stability [24]. OB is the fraction of an orally administered drug that reaches systemic circulation, which reveals the convergence of the ADME process. High oral bioavailability is often a key indicator to determine the druglikeness properties of bioactive molecules as therapeutic agents [25]. Then, according to recommendations from the TCMSP, we established preset criteria of OB ≥ 30% and DL ≥ 0.18 to screen for the possible bioactive ingredients in GGQLD.

GGQLD-related target prediction

The corresponding protein targets of each active ingredient in GGQLD were predicted using TCMSP. Predicted targets from TCMSP were extracted and converted to gene names using UniProtKB (http://www.uniprot.org). Target information was set to Homo sapiens and aggregated for further analysis.

UC-related gene database construction

UC-related genes were retrieved from the DisGeNET database (https://www.disgenet.org/), GeneCards database (https://www.genecards.org/), and DrugBank database (https://www.drugbank.ca/). DisGenNET is a knowledge management platform integrating and standardizing data about disease-associated genes and variants from multiple sources. It also covers the full spectrum of human diseases as well as normal and abnormal traits [26,27]. The GeneCards database is a one-stop shop for searchable human gene annotations [28,29]. DrugBank is a web-enabled database containing comprehensive molecular information about drugs, their mechanisms, their interactions, and their targets [30]. DrugBank was searched for known UC drugs/drug-like compounds that were approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical trials. Finally, the common targets shared by at least two databases were retained as UC-related targets, while the other targets were removed.

Construction of a GGQLD-compound-target-UC network for GGQLD

Intersections of GGQLD targets and UC-related targets were regarded as potential targets of GGQLD for the treatment of UC. The corresponding chemical compounds of the intersecting targets were thought to be possible therapeutic components that affect UC. The potential targets were obtained by a Venn diagram. A GGQLD-compound-target-UC (G-U) network was constructed to clarify the relationship between active compounds in GGQLD and potential targets. This network was constructed and visualized using Cytoscape 3.7.2 software.

Functional enrichment analysis of GGQLD-related targets

To investigate biological functions associated with potential targets, we performed Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway enrichment analyses via the ‘clusterProfiler’ R package. The ‘clusterProfiler’ R package serves as a user-friendly enrichment tool with integrated gene cluster analysis based on multiple resources [31]. GO enrichment analysis was used to explain and annotate genes by three dimensions, including cellular component (CC), molecular function (MF), and biological process (BP) analyses. The KEGG database was mainly used for pathway analysis. In addition, at least three genes were contained, and P-values below 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

Protein–protein interaction network between targets in the G-U network

Protein–protein interaction (PPI) is of pivotal importance in the regulation of biological systems and is consequently implicated in the development of disease states [32]. The potential targets were introduced into the STRING database (https://string-db.org/) to perform PPI analysis. STRING, an online PPI analysis database, currently features the largest number of organisms (5090) and proteins (24.6 million) and has very broad and diverse, benchmarked data sources [33]. The species was limited to ‘Homo sapiens’, and the minimum required interaction score was set to be high confidence (0.700). The PPI network was visualized with Cytoscape 3.7.2 software.

Hub gene and key active compound screening and evaluation

To further identify the hub genes in the potential targets, the top 10 hub genes were identified using MCC methods in ‘cytoHubba’ of Cytoscape 3.7.2 software [34]. Furthermore, GO and KEGG pathway analyses of hub genes were performed via the Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID) (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/), a web-based analysis tool. Gene counts >3 and a P-value below 0.05 were considered as the cutoff criteria. To reveal the relationship between hub genes and possible therapeutic components, the corresponding chemical compounds of hub genes were incorporated into a Sankey diagram.

Verification through molecular docking

Molecular docking was used to predict the activities of binding of proteins to compounds via CB-Dock (http://cao.labshare.cn/cb-dock/). CB-Dock is a protein-ligand docking method that automatically identifies the binding sites, calculates the center and size, customizes the docking box size according to the query ligands, and then performs molecular docking with AutoDock Vina [35]. The PDB formats of proteins were derived from the RCSB PDB database (https://www.rcsb.org/), and SDF formats of ligands were obtained from the PubChem database (https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/), respectively. The styles of the ligand and receptor were set as ‘ball and stick’ and ‘cartoon’, respectively. The colors of the ligand and receptor were set as ‘By Element’ and ‘By Chain’, respectively. The vina sore represents a certain binding activity between a ligand and a protein. The lower the vina score is, the more stable the ligand binds to the protein.

Bioactive compounds in GGQLD

Bioactive ingredients in GGQLD and corresponding ADME information were extracted from the TCMSP data server. In total, 154 bioactive compounds were identified in GGQLD. After filtering by druglikeness threshold (OB ≥ 30% and DL ≥ 0.18), a total of 139 ingredients were identified, including 14 components of Huanglian, 35 components of Huang Qin, 4 components of Gegen, and 92 components of Gancao. Some compounds are shared by two or more herbs, such as quercetin (MOL000098), which is shared by Huanglian and Gancao; beta-sitosterol (MOL000358), which is shared by Gegen and Huang Qin; coptisine (MOL001458) and epiberberine (MOL002897), which are shared by Huanglian and Huang Qin; and formononetin (MOL000392), which is shared by Gegen and Gancao. Detailed information regarding these ingredients is shown in Supplementary Table S1.

Identification of targets in GGQLD

Potential targets in GGQLD were predicted in TCMSP. In total, 259 targets were identified for 139 bioactive compounds (4 compounds did not receive predictions). Afterward, predicted targets from the TCMSP were extracted and converted to gene names using UniProtKB. From the results, we can see that many compounds were predicted to target the same proteins, such as 62 ingredients targeted to PPARG.

Identification of UC-related targets

The identification of UC-related targets was searched using the keyword ‘ulcerative colitis’ from the following resources: DisGeNET database, GeneCards database, and DrugBank database. A total of 5273 genes were searched, including 914 genes from the DisGeNET database, 4356 genes from the GeneCards database, and 64 genes from the DrugBank database, and 17 FDA-approved compounds were identified for the treatment of UC. As a result, there are 776 common targets shared by at least two databases, which were retained as UC-related targets.

Construction of a GGQLD-compound-target-UC network

Based on the GGQLD target database and UC-related target database, 83 overlapping genes were identified as potential targets for GGQLD against UC, as shown in the Venn diagram (Figure 2). The results showed that 10 genes, namely, ABCG2, CD40LG, CYP3A4, IFNG, MPO, NOS2, NR1I2, PPARG, PTGS1, and PTGS2, overlapped from the four databases (GGQLD, DisGenet, GeneCards, DrugBank). Detailed information regarding these targets is shown in Supplementary Table S2.

Venn diagram

Figure 2
Venn diagram

Venn diagram showing the numbers of overlapping and specific genes among the four databases (GGQLD, DisGenet, GeneCards, and DrugBank). The overlapping genes were selected for further analysis.

Figure 2
Venn diagram

Venn diagram showing the numbers of overlapping and specific genes among the four databases (GGQLD, DisGenet, GeneCards, and DrugBank). The overlapping genes were selected for further analysis.

Close modal

There were 118 active ingredients corresponding to the 83 potential targets. To better understand the complex relationships between all bioactive compounds in GGQLD and their UC-related targets, a G-U network was constructed (Figure 3). There were 205 nodes in the G-U network composed of 118 active ingredients and 83 UC targets connected by 866 interactions. In addition, as shown in Figure 3, node size indicated the number of connections calculated using ‘NetworkAnalyzer’, an analytical tool in Cytoscape 3.7.2. The top five ingredients were quercetin, kaempferol, wogonin, baicalein, and naringenin. The details of the five ingredients are described in Table 1. The details of the G-U network are listed in Supplementary Table S3.

The G-U network

Figure 3
The G-U network

The green squares represent the drug; the purple diamonds represent the potential targets; the arrows represent the drug ingredients; and the olive square indicates shared ingredients. The colors indicate different herbs. The line between two nodes represents the interaction, and the size of each node indicates the number of connections.

Figure 3
The G-U network

The green squares represent the drug; the purple diamonds represent the potential targets; the arrows represent the drug ingredients; and the olive square indicates shared ingredients. The colors indicate different herbs. The line between two nodes represents the interaction, and the size of each node indicates the number of connections.

Close modal
Table 1
The top five ingredients in the G-U network
Mol IDMolecule nameMWAlogPHdonHaccOB (%)Caco-2BBBDLFASA-HLChemical structure
MOL000098 Quercetin 302.25 1.5 46.43 0.05 -0.77 0.28 0.38 14.4  
MOL000422 Kaempferol 286.25 1.77 41.88 0.26 -0.55 0.24 14.74  
MOL000173 Wogonin 284.28 2.59 30.68 0.79 0.04 0.23 0.32 17.75  
MOL002714 Baicalein 270.25 2.33 33.52 0.63 -0.05 0.21 0.36 16.25  
MOL004328 Naringenin 272.27 2.3 59.29 0.28 -0.37 0.21 0.4 16.98  
Mol IDMolecule nameMWAlogPHdonHaccOB (%)Caco-2BBBDLFASA-HLChemical structure
MOL000098 Quercetin 302.25 1.5 46.43 0.05 -0.77 0.28 0.38 14.4  
MOL000422 Kaempferol 286.25 1.77 41.88 0.26 -0.55 0.24 14.74  
MOL000173 Wogonin 284.28 2.59 30.68 0.79 0.04 0.23 0.32 17.75  
MOL002714 Baicalein 270.25 2.33 33.52 0.63 -0.05 0.21 0.36 16.25  
MOL004328 Naringenin 272.27 2.3 59.29 0.28 -0.37 0.21 0.4 16.98  

GO and KEGG pathway enrichment analyses of the G-U network

To further validate whether biological functions enriched by candidate targets as mentioned above were correlated with UC, GO and KEGG enrichment analyses were performed via R. Three GO terms were analyzed, which included CC, MF, and BP. The top 10 GO enrichment results for each term are shown in Figure 4. In the CC group, the GO terms mainly included the ‘vesicle lumen’, ‘secretory granule lumen’, and ‘membrane raft’. In the MF group, the GO terms were mainly involved ‘cytokine receptor binding’, ‘heme binding’, and ‘receptor ligand activity’. Moreover, BP results indicated that GGQLD may regulate UC-related biological processes, such as ‘reactive oxygen species metabolic process’, ‘response to lipopolysaccharide’, ‘response to reactive oxygen species’, and ‘response to oxidative stress’.

GO and KEGG pathway enrichment analysis results

Figure 4
GO and KEGG pathway enrichment analysis results

(A) MF enrichment analysis; (B) BP enrichment analysis; (C) CC enrichment analysis; (D) KEGG enrichment analysis. The size of each node indicates enriched counts, the abscissa represents the enriched gene ratio, and color means enriched adjusted P-value.

Figure 4
GO and KEGG pathway enrichment analysis results

(A) MF enrichment analysis; (B) BP enrichment analysis; (C) CC enrichment analysis; (D) KEGG enrichment analysis. The size of each node indicates enriched counts, the abscissa represents the enriched gene ratio, and color means enriched adjusted P-value.

Close modal

Additionally, 123 KEGG pathways were found. KEGG enrichment analysis showed that the 83 potential targets were closely related to several critical pathways associated with UC, such as ‘IL-17 signaling pathway’, ‘tumor necrosis factor (TNF) signaling pathway’, ‘Th17 cell differentiation’, ‘inflammatory bowel disease’, ‘Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1 signaling pathway’, and ‘inflammatory bowel disease’. The top 20 enriched KEGG signaling pathways are shown in Figure 4. These findings demonstrated that the regulation of inflammation and immunity may be the main mechanism of GGQLD in the treatment of UC. The detailed GO and KEGG pathway enrichment analyses results are listed in Supplementary Table S4.

PPI network visualization

To further investigate the relationship between the 83 overlapping genes, the PPIs were analyzed using the STRING online database, and high confidence target protein interaction data with a score >0.7 were selected. The obtained PPI network file was imported into Cytoscape 3.7.2 software for visualization. We found 77 nodes and 609 interactions in the PPI network, and the results are shown in Figure 5. ‘NetworkAnalyzer’ was used to show the importance of nodes.

The PPI network of the potential targets

Figure 5
The PPI network of the potential targets

Node size from large to small represents the descending order of the degree value. The line width between two nodes represents the interaction; the darker the color is, the more significant is the target.

Figure 5
The PPI network of the potential targets

Node size from large to small represents the descending order of the degree value. The line width between two nodes represents the interaction; the darker the color is, the more significant is the target.

Close modal

Hub gene investigation and screening of key active ingredients

According to the PPI network, the top 10 core nodes were identified, ranked by MCC in the ‘cytoHubba’ plugin. Thus, 10 genes were identified as hub genes: IL-6, TNF, STAT3, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2, intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM1), IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2, as shown in Figure 6A. Additionally, GO and KEGG analyses were conducted again on the 10 hub genes to validate their biological functions. The enrichment analysis results validated that the 10 hub genes were strongly related to UC. For instance, IL-6 is involved in ‘immune response’, ‘cellular response to lipopolysaccharide’, and ‘inflammatory bowel disease’, all of which are closely related to UC. The top 5 GO terms and KEGG pathways of the 10 hub genes are shown in Figure 6B. The detailed GO and KEGG enrichment of the 10 hub genes are listed in Supplementary Table S5. Moreover, a Sankey diagram was used to show the corresponding chemical compound that acts on hub genes, as shown in Figure 6C. Six ingredients in GGQLD, namely, quercetin, formononetin, kaempferol, licochalcone A, oroxylin A, and wogonin, which corresponded to the hub genes were identified. From the Sankey diagram, we can see that quercetin, shared by Huanglian and Gancao, targets most of the hub genes.

The results of hub gene investigation and screening of key active ingredients

Figure 6
The results of hub gene investigation and screening of key active ingredients

(A) The 10 hub genes identified from the PPI network. The darker the color is, the more significant the gene. (B) The top 5 GO terms and KEGG pathways of the 10 hub genes. Each bar indicates a BP/CC/MF/KEGG term, color represents an enriched type, abscissa means the number of enriched genes. (C) The Sankey diagram reveals the relationship between herbs, ingredients, and targets. The left blocks represent the herb, the middle blocks represent the ingredients, and the right blocks represent the hub targets.

Figure 6
The results of hub gene investigation and screening of key active ingredients

(A) The 10 hub genes identified from the PPI network. The darker the color is, the more significant the gene. (B) The top 5 GO terms and KEGG pathways of the 10 hub genes. Each bar indicates a BP/CC/MF/KEGG term, color represents an enriched type, abscissa means the number of enriched genes. (C) The Sankey diagram reveals the relationship between herbs, ingredients, and targets. The left blocks represent the herb, the middle blocks represent the ingredients, and the right blocks represent the hub targets.

Close modal

Verification with molecular docking

To further validate potential targets in UC, we performed molecular docking on quercetin with the 10 hub genes (IL-6, TNF, STAT3, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2, ICAM1, IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2). Docking analysis successfully predicted Vina scores, which were all negative and less than −6, between quercetin and the 10 hub genes; the results are listed in Table 2. In particular, molecular docking between quercetin and TNF has the highest cavity size and the lowest Vina score. Overall, molecular docking results indicated that quercetin had good binding activities to the 10 hub genes, as shown in Figure 7.

Molecular docking models of quercetin binding to the 10 hub targets

Figure 7
Molecular docking models of quercetin binding to the 10 hub targets

Quercetin binds to IL-6 (A), TNF (B), STAT3 (C), IL-1β (D), CXCL8 (E), CCL2 (F), ICAM1 (G), IL-10 (H), IL-4 (I), and IL-2 (J). Ball and stick represents quercetin; cartoon represents a hub target.

Figure 7
Molecular docking models of quercetin binding to the 10 hub targets

Quercetin binds to IL-6 (A), TNF (B), STAT3 (C), IL-1β (D), CXCL8 (E), CCL2 (F), ICAM1 (G), IL-10 (H), IL-4 (I), and IL-2 (J). Ball and stick represents quercetin; cartoon represents a hub target.

Close modal
Table 2
The results of cavity-detection guided blind docking
LigandProteinVina scoreCavity sizeCenterSize
xyzxyz
Quercetin IL-6 −7.2 551 −2 10 27 21 21 
 TNF −9.1 863 63 31 21 21 21 
 STAT3 −8 527 16 12 18 21 21 21 
 IL-1 −6.7 197 40 56 21 21 21 
 CXCL8 −6.3 185 −15 22 24 21 21 21 
 CCL2 −6.3 48 31 30 16 21 21 21 
 ICAM1 −6.6 100 50 92 −12 21 21 21 
 IL10 −6.6 485 11 26 17 21 21 21 
 IL4 −7.3 105 82 35 11 21 21 21 
 IL2 −7.7 615 32 49 35 21 21 21 
LigandProteinVina scoreCavity sizeCenterSize
xyzxyz
Quercetin IL-6 −7.2 551 −2 10 27 21 21 
 TNF −9.1 863 63 31 21 21 21 
 STAT3 −8 527 16 12 18 21 21 21 
 IL-1 −6.7 197 40 56 21 21 21 
 CXCL8 −6.3 185 −15 22 24 21 21 21 
 CCL2 −6.3 48 31 30 16 21 21 21 
 ICAM1 −6.6 100 50 92 −12 21 21 21 
 IL10 −6.6 485 11 26 17 21 21 21 
 IL4 −7.3 105 82 35 11 21 21 21 
 IL2 −7.7 615 32 49 35 21 21 21 

Currently, TCM is being more frequently chosen by patients to treat UC, and many TCM formulas have been successfully utilized for the treatment of UC [36,37], including GGQLD. In vivo and in vitro studies have provided multiple lines of evidence indicating that some ingredients of GGQLD, such as berberine and glabridin, have definite beneficial effects against UC [16]. Given the particularity of multicomponent, multitarget, and multichannel TCM formulas, the underlying molecular mechanisms triggered by GGQLD in the treatment of UC are far from being clarified. New approaches are now being considered for drug–target exploration and identification of potential active ingredients in TCM research, including network pharmacology [38]. Here, we used network pharmacology technology to predict the putative mechanism involved within the therapeutic effect of GGQLD in UC. In the present study, we identified 139 bioactive compounds and 259 targets from the 4 herbs in GGQLD. Furthermore, 83 potential therapeutic targets and 118 corresponding active ingredients were identified, and a G-U network was established with 205 nodes and 866 interactions. Additionally, GO and KEGG enrichment was further enriched based on the 83 potential target genes, and a PPI network was constructed. Finally, 5 potential ingredients and 10 hub genes were identified.

Consistent with previous studies, BP enrichment results indicated that a large number of genes were associated with oxidative stress, a key etiological factor of UC, including ‘reactive oxygen species metabolic process’, ‘response to reactive oxygen species’, ‘response to oxidative stress’, ‘regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic process’, and ‘cellular response to oxidative stress’. The gastrointestinal tract is prone to reactive oxygen species (ROS) attack. Alterations in the balance between ROS production and the capacity to rapidly detoxify reactive intermediates lead to oxidative stress, which is an essential factor in the pathogenesis of gastrointestinal mucosal disease [39]. During inflammatory episodes, neutrophils and macrophages infiltrate the intestinal mucosa at the sites of IBD and release large amounts of ROS and cytokines, including interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α. Excessive levels of ROS released by the inflamed stroma elicit oxidative damage to DNA [40], proteins [41], and lipids, ultimately promoting the initiation and progression of UC. The response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was also enriched in BP, which could also play a pathogenic role in UC [42]. LPS is a major component of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria [43], and plays a key role in host–pathogen interactions with the innate immune system [44] and the development of inflammatory diseases [45]. LPS impairs intestinal barrier function by inhibiting intestinal restitution and stimulating the release of proinflammatory cytokines. Therefore, our results indicate that GGQLD may also have a role in regulating the intestinal microbiota.

Additionally, the KEGG results indicate that most of the disease-related pathways are immune and inflammatory, tumor-related signaling pathways, and virus infection-related signaling pathways, most of which have been reported to be closely related to UC. For example, IL-17, a key mediator in the pathogenesis of intestinal inflammation, is upregulated in inflamed mucosa from UC patients. The disease severity in UC patients is also correlated with the IL-17 level in peripheral blood mononuclear cells [46]. In addition, IL-17 is produced mainly by T helper 17 (Th17) cells and other sources, including natural killer cells, mast cells, and neutrophils. Th17 cells are considered to be key effector T cells of UC pathophysiology. New data from mouse models of IBD suggest that T cell plasticity, particularly along the Th1-Th17 and Th17-Treg axes, play an important role in the regulation of intestinal immune responses [47]. Our functional enrichment analysis results indicated that anti-inflammation, antioxidation, and immunomodulatory effects may be the mechanism of GGQLD against UC.

Therefore, we further constructed a PPI network to unravel the complex molecular relationships underlying the potential targets, and 10 hub genes, namely, IL-6, TNF, STAT3, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2, ICAM1, IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2, were identified by ‘cytoHubba’. Most of them are cytokines, such as proinflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF IL-1β, CXCL8, and CCL2), and anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2). Cytokines are structurally diverse proteins with profound functional relevance to the maintenance of physiological homeostasis, including chemokines, interferons, interleukins, lymphokines, and tumor necrosis factors [48]. Cytokines are involved in intestinal homeostasis and pathological processes associated with IBD [49]. For example, M1 macrophages promote colonic inflammation via the production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6, CCL2, and TNF-α [50]. IL-6, a key proinflammatory cytokine in the pathogenesis of multiple inflammatory diseases, acts on mesenchymal and epithelial cells to induce the recruitment of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and macrophages essential for wound healing. Recently, a genome-wide meta-analysis of 20,550 patients with CD, 17,647 patients with UC, and more than 40,000 individuals without IBD (controls) indicated that therapeutics designed to block IL-6R signaling might be effective in the treatment of IBD [51]. Chemokines are small secreted proteins that orchestrate the migration and positioning of immune cells within tissues [52]. During innate and adaptive responses, chemokines are essential for the function of the immune system. CXCL8 is one of the first and most intensively studied chemokines acting as a proinflammatory chemokine [53]. Patients with UC have elevated levels of CXCL8 and CCL2 in the colonic mucosa compared with healthy volunteers [54]. TNF is another key cytokine in IBD pathology and induces intestinal epithelial cell apoptosis in the context of IBD and murine disease models [55]. Furthermore, treatment strategies targeting TNF signaling, such as infliximab, adalimumab, and golimumab, are administered systemically and efficaciously in UC.

Cytokines are crucial for the maintenance of the immune system. For example, IL-10 is a key immunosuppressive cytokine expressed by many cell types and is particularly important in maintaining intestinal microbe-immune homeostasis. Polymorphisms in the IL-10 locus confer risk for UC, deficient in either IL-10 or IL-10 receptor exhibit severe intestinal inflammation and marked pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion in mice and humans [56]. IL-10 production by Th17 cells has been strongly related to the acquisition of regulatory properties by Th17 cells and the resolution of intestinal inflammation [57]. IL-4, the core signature of Th2 responses, induces the differentiation of naive helper T cells to Th2 cells [58]. Enormous reports have also provided evidence that IL-4 participates in the pathogenesis of IBD [59,60]. Human IL-4-treated regulatory macrophages promote epithelial wound repair, reduce cytokine-induced epithelial barrier defects and are beneficial in a murine model of acute colitis [61]. IL-2 is known as a T cell growth factor [62], negatively regulates immune-mediated inflammation and stimulates tissue repair processes [63]. Low-dose IL-2 has therapeutic effects on DSS-induced colitis and potential clinical value in treating UC [64].

Cytokine signaling pathways involving transcription factors of the signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) family play a key role in the pathogenesis of IBD [48]. STAT3 activation occurs as a result of cytokine binding (e.g., IL-­6), and several studies have reported an increased expression of STAT3 or STAT3 phosphorylation in human IBD [65,66]. STAT3 has also been shown to be critical in modulating the balance of Th17 and regulatory T (Treg) cells as well as in promoting CD4(+) T cell proliferation [67]. ICAM-1 is a transmembrane glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin family that is constitutively expressed on vascular endothelial cells and upregulated in inflamed colonic tissue [68]. It has been demonstrated that ICAM-1 expression is increased in colonic lysates from UC patients. ICAM-1 can also be up-regulated in response to proinflammatory stimuli, such as TNF-α, IL-1β, and IFN-γ. In particular, ICAM-1 signaling seems to produce the recruitment of inflammatory immune cells [69] such as macrophages [70] and granulocytes [71]. Meanwhile, the GO and KEGG analyses of the 10 hub nodes showed that a considerable number of genes were involved in the ‘inflammatory bowel disease’ and ‘cytokine–cytokine receptor interaction’ pathways.

The Sankey diagram indicated that quercetin corresponds to most of the hub targets. Quercetin is a plant-derived polyphenolic compound belonging to the flavonols (a subclass of flavonoids) and has shown beneficial effects in the prevention and/or treatment of several pathological conditions due to its antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic, antimicrobial, and antitumoral activities [72–74]. In the gastrointestinal tract, quercitrin can reduce early-stage inflammation by reducing IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α levels and NF-κB expression [74]. Various studies have shown the anti-inflammatory activity of quercetin in experimental colitis [75,76]. Moreover, modulation of the intestinal microbiota is another way for quercetin to exert a therapeutic effect. Recent studies have shown that quercetin reshapes intestinal microbiota in several diseases, such as obesity, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and atherosclerosis, suggesting a prebiotic effect of flavonol [77,78]. Furthermore, molecular docking was conducted between quercetin and the 10 hub genes to verify the binding activities between active ingredients and potential targets. The results showed that quercetin had good binding activities to IL-6, TNF, STAT3, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2, ICAM1, IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2.

Cytokines that either promote or suppress intestinal inflammation have led to some efficacious therapeutics for IBD [79]. In general, these therapies can be grouped into two categories: blockade of pro-inflammatory cytokine pathways or enhancement of anti-inflammatory cytokine pathways [80]. The discovery and characterization of these therapies indicate that simultaneous regulation of anti-inflammatory factors and pro-inflammatory factors may become a more potential treatment strategy for IBD. Our research suggests that GGQLD may have such a therapeutic effect.

Current research based on network pharmacology could provide a novel and systematic analysis method for the research of Chinese herbal formulas. However, it should be noted that there were some limitations in our article. On the one hand, focusing on validated target genes may exclude potential targets that have not been experimentally validated. On the other hand, there is a lack of verification analyses in our research. Thus, further clinical and basic research is needed to validate our results and to elucidate the molecular mechanism in GGQLD.

Overall, the present study suggests that quercetin, kaempferol, wogonin, baicalein, and naringenin may be the main active ingredients in GGQLD. Cytokines (e.g., IL-6, TNF, IL-1β, CXCL8, CCL2, IL-10, IL-4, and IL-2) might be potential therapeutic targets of GGQLD in UC. Furthermore, the effect of GGQLD on UC might be achieved by regulating the balance of cytokines in the immune system and inflammation-related pathways, such as the IL-17 pathway and Th17 cell differentiation pathway. Last but not least, this research showed that network pharmacology is a powerful tool for identifying active compounds and potential targets derived from TCM.

The data used to support the result of this study can be obtained from the corresponding author.

The authors declare that there are no competing interests associated with the manuscript.

This work has been financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 81830118] and the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 81774303].

Lin Xu, Feng-Yun Wang, and Xu-Dong Tang designed the study. Jia-Qi Zhang, Yi-Fan Wang, and Ze-Dan Zhang screened and extracted the data. Lin Xu and Yi-Fan Wang conducted the data analysis. Lin Xu wrote the paper. Feng-Yun Wang and Xu-Dong Tang reviewed and edited the manuscript. All authors have read and agree to the published version of the manuscript.

ADME

absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion

BP

biological process

CC

cellular component

DL

drug-likeness

FDA

Food and Drug Administration

G-U

GGQLD-compound-target-UC

GGQLD

Ge-Gen-Qin-Lian Decoction

GO

Gene Ontology

ICAM-1

intracellular adhesion molecule-1

IL

interleukin

KEGG

Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes

LPS

lipopolysaccharide

MF

molecular function

OB

oral bioavailability

PMN

polymorphonuclear leukocyte

PPI

protein–protein interaction

ROS

reactive oxygen species

STAT

signal transducers and activators of transcription

TCMSP

Traditional Chinese Medicine Systems Pharmacology Database and Analysis Platform

Th17

T helper 17

TNF

tumor necrosis factor

Treg

regulatory T

UC

ulcerative colitis

1.
Ungaro
R.
,
Mehandru
S.
,
Allen
P.B.
,
Peyrin-Biroulet
L.
and
Colombel
J.F.
(
2017
)
Ulcerative colitis
.
Lancet
389
,
1756
1770
[PubMed]
2.
Ng
S.C.
,
Shi
H.Y.
,
Hamidi
N.
,
Underwood
F.E.
,
Tang
W.
,
Benchimol
E.I.
et al.
(
2018
)
Worldwide incidence and prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease in the 21st century: a systematic review of population-based studies
.
Lancet
390
,
2769
2778
[PubMed]
3.
Pickard
J.M.
,
Zeng
M.Y.
,
Caruso
R.
and
Núñez
G.
(
2017
)
Gut microbiota: Role in pathogen colonization, immune responses, and inflammatory disease
.
Immunol. Rev.
279
,
70
89
[PubMed]
4.
Graham
D.B.
and
Xavier
R.J.
(
2020
)
Pathway paradigms revealed from the genetics of inflammatory bowel disease
.
Nature
578
,
527
539
[PubMed]
5.
Paramsothy
S.
,
Kamm
M.A.
,
Kaakoush
N.O.
,
Walsh
A.J.
,
van den Bogaerde
J.
,
Samuel
D.
et al.
(
2017
)
Multidonor intensive faecal microbiota transplantation for active ulcerative colitis: a randomised placebo-controlled trial
.
Lancet
389
,
1218
1228
[PubMed]
6.
Mishra
R.
,
Dhawan
P.
,
Srivastava
A.S.
and
Singh
A.B.
(
2020
)
Inflammatory bowel disease: Therapeutic limitations and prospective of the stem cell therapy
.
World J. Stem Cells
12
,
1050
1066
[PubMed]
7.
Picardo
S.
,
Altuwaijri
M.
,
Devlin
S.M.
and
Seow
C.H.
(
2020
)
Complementary and alternative medications in the management of inflammatory bowel disease
.
Therap. Adv. Gastroenterol.
13
,
1756284820927550
[PubMed]
8.
Langhorst
J.
,
Wulfert
H.
,
Lauche
R.
,
Klose
P.
,
Cramer
H.
,
Dobos
G.J.
et al.
(
2015
)
Systematic review of complementary and alternative medicine treatments in inflammatory bowel diseases
.
J. Crohns. Colitis
9
,
86
106
[PubMed]
9.
Heuschkel
R.
,
Afzal
N.
,
Wuerth
A.
,
Zurakowski
D.
,
Leichtner
A.
,
Kemper
K.
et al.
(
2002
)
Complementary medicine use in children and young adults with inflammatory bowel disease
.
Am. J. Gastroenterol.
97
,
382
388
[PubMed]
10.
Rawsthorne
P.
,
Clara
I.
,
Graff
L.A.
,
Bernstein
K.I.
,
Carr
R.
,
Walker
J.R.
et al.
(
2012
)
The Manitoba Inflammatory Bowel Disease Cohort Study: a prospective longitudinal evaluation of the use of complementary and alternative medicine services and products
.
Gut
61
,
521
527
[PubMed]
11.
Holleran
G.
,
Scaldaferri
F.
,
Gasbarrini
A.
and
Currò
D.
(
2020
)
Herbal medicinal products for inflammatory bowel disease: A focus on those assessed in double-blind randomised controlled trials
.
Phytother. Res.
34
,
77
93
[PubMed]
12.
Currò
D.
,
Ianiro
G.
,
Pecere
S.
,
Bibbò
S.
and
Cammarota
G.
(
2017
)
Probiotics, fibre and herbal medicinal products for functional and inflammatory bowel disorders
.
Br. J. Pharmacol.
174
,
1426
1449
[PubMed]
13.
Liu
T.
,
Tian
X.
,
Li
Z.
,
Han
F.
,
Ji
B.
,
Zhao
Y.
et al.
(
2018
)
Metabolic profiling of Gegenqinlian decoction in rat plasma, urine, bile and feces after oral administration by ultra high performance liquid chromatography coupled with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry
.
J. Chromatogr. B Analyt. Technol. Biomed. Life Sci.
1079
,
69
84
[PubMed]
14.
Ding
Z.
,
Zhong
R.
,
Yang
Y.
,
Xia
T.
,
Wang
W.
,
Wang
Y.
et al.
(
2020
)
Systems pharmacology reveals the mechanism of activity of Ge-Gen-Qin-Lian decoction against LPS-induced acute lung injury: A novel strategy for exploring active components and effective mechanism of TCM formulae
.
Pharmacol. Res.
156
,
104759
[PubMed]
15.
Zhao
Y.
,
Luan
H.
,
Gao
H.
,
Wu
X.
,
Zhang
Y.
and
Li
R.
(
2020
)
Gegen Qinlian decoction maintains colonic mucosal homeostasis in acute/chronic ulcerative colitis via bidirectionally modulating dysregulated Notch signaling
.
Phytomedicine
68
,
153182
[PubMed]
16.
Fan
Y.
,
Yi
W.
,
Huang
H.
,
Mei
Z.
and
Feng
Z.
(
2019
)
Efficacy of herbal medicine (Gegen Qinlian Decoction) on ulcerative colitis: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials
.
Medicine (Baltimore)
98
,
e18512
[PubMed]
17.
Yang
J.
,
Tian
S.
,
Zhao
J.
and
Zhang
W.
(
2020
)
Exploring the mechanism of TCM formulae in the treatment of different types of coronary heart disease by network pharmacology and machining learning
.
Pharmacol. Res.
159
,
105034
[PubMed]
18.
Li
S.
and
Zhang
B.
(
2013
)
Traditional Chinese medicine network pharmacology: theory, methodology and application
.
Chin. J. Nat. Med.
11
,
110
120
[PubMed]
19.
Zhang
Z.
,
Li
B.
,
Huang
J.
,
Huang
S.
,
He
D.
,
Peng
W.
et al.
(
2020
)
A Network Pharmacology Analysis of the Active Components of the Traditional Chinese Medicine Zuojinwan in Patients with Gastric Cancer
.
Med. Sci. Monit.
26
,
e923327
[PubMed]
20.
Li
J.
,
Ye
M.
,
Gao
J.
,
Zhang
Y.
,
Zhu
Q.
and
Liang
W.
(
2020
)
Systematic Understanding of Mechanism of Yi-Qi-Huo-Xue Decoction Against Intracerebral Hemorrhagic Stroke Using a Network Pharmacology Approach
.
Med. Sci. Monit.
26
,
e921849
[PubMed]
21.
Liu
Y.
,
Xue
Q.
,
Li
A.
,
Li
K.
and
Qin
X.
(
2020
)
Mechanisms exploration of herbal pair of HuangQi-DanShen on cerebral ischemia based on metabonomics and network pharmacology
.
J. Ethnopharmacol.
253
,
112688
[PubMed]
22.
Ru
J.
,
Li
P.
,
Wang
J.
,
Zhou
W.
,
Li
B.
,
Huang
C.
et al.
(
2014
)
TCMSP: a database of systems pharmacology for drug discovery from herbal medicines
.
J. Cheminform.
6
,
13
[PubMed]
23.
Lipinski
C.A.
,
Lombardo
F.
,
Dominy
B.W.
and
Feeney
P.J.
(
2001
)
Experimental and computational approaches to estimate solubility and permeability in drug discovery and development settings
.
Adv. Drug Deliv. Rev.
46
,
3
26
[PubMed]
24.
Tao
W.
,
Xu
X.
,
Wang
X.
,
Li
B.
,
Wang
Y.
,
Li
Y.
et al.
(
2013
)
Network pharmacology-based prediction of the active ingredients and potential targets of Chinese herbal Radix Curcumae formula for application to cardiovascular disease
.
J. Ethnopharmacol.
145
,
1
10
[PubMed]
25.
Xu
X.
,
Zhang
W.
,
Huang
C.
,
Li
Y.
,
Yu
H.
,
Wang
Y.
et al.
(
2012
)
A novel chemometric method for the prediction of human oral bioavailability
.
Int. J. Mol. Sci.
13
,
6964
6982
[PubMed]
26.
Piñero
J.
,
Bravo
À.
,
Queralt-Rosinach
N.
,
Gutiérrez-Sacristán
A.
,
Deu-Pons
J.
,
Centeno
E.
et al.
(
2017
)
DisGeNET: a comprehensive platform integrating information on human disease-associated genes and variants
.
Nucleic Acids Res.
45
,
D833
D839
[PubMed]
27.
Piñero
J.
,
Ramírez-Anguita
J.M.
,
Saüch-Pitarch
J.
,
Ronzano
F.
,
Centeno
E.
,
Sanz
F.
et al.
(
2020
)
The DisGeNET knowledge platform for disease genomics: 2019 update
.
Nucleic Acids Res.
48
,
D845
D855
[PubMed]
28.
Rebhan
M.
,
Chalifa-Caspi
V.
,
Prilusky
J.
and
Lancet
D.
(
1997
)
GeneCards: integrating information about genes, proteins and diseases
.
Trends Genet.
13
,
163
[PubMed]
29.
Fishilevich
S.
,
Zimmerman
S.
,
Kohn
A.
,
Iny Stein
T.
,
Olender
T.
,
Kolker
E.
et al.
(
2016
)
Genic insights from integrated human proteomics in GeneCards
.
Database (Oxford)
2016
,
1
17
[PubMed]
30.
Wishart
D.S.
,
Feunang
Y.D.
,
Guo
A.C.
,
Lo
E.J.
,
Marcu
A.
,
Grant
J.R.
et al.
(
2018
)
DrugBank 5.0: a major update to the DrugBank database for 2018
.
Nucleic Acids Res.
46
,
D1074
D1082
[PubMed]
31.
Yu
G.
,
Wang
L.G.
,
Han
Y.
and
He
Q.Y.
(
2012
)
clusterProfiler: an R package for comparing biological themes among gene clusters
.
OMICS
16
,
284
287
[PubMed]
32.
Scott
D.E.
,
Bayly
A.R.
,
Abell
C.
and
Skidmore
J.
(
2016
)
Small molecules, big targets: drug discovery faces the protein-protein interaction challenge
.
Nat. Rev. Drug Discov.
15
,
533
550
[PubMed]
33.
Szklarczyk
D.
,
Gable
A.L.
,
Lyon
D.
,
Junge
A.
,
Wyder
S.
,
Huerta-Cepas
J.
et al.
(
2019
)
STRING v11: protein-protein association networks with increased coverage, supporting functional discovery in genome-wide experimental datasets
.
Nucleic Acids Res.
47
,
D607
D613
[PubMed]
34.
Chin
C.H.
,
Chen
S.H.
,
Wu
H.H.
,
Ho
C.W.
,
Ko
M.T.
and
Lin
C.Y.
(
2014
)
cytoHubba: identifying hub objects and sub-networks from complex interactome
.
BMC Syst. Biol.
8
,
S11
[PubMed]
35.
Liu
Y.
,
Grimm
M.
,
Dai
W.T.
,
Hou
M.C.
,
Xiao
Z.X.
and
Cao
Y.
(
2020
)
CB-Dock: a web server for cavity detection-guided protein-ligand blind docking
.
Acta Pharmacol. Sin.
41
,
138
144
[PubMed]
36.
Cao
S.Y.
,
Ye
S.J.
,
Wang
W.W.
,
Wang
B.
,
Zhang
T.
and
Pu
Y.Q.
(
2019
)
Progress in active compounds effective on ulcerative colitis from Chinese medicines
.
Chin. J. Nat. Med.
17
,
81
102
[PubMed]
37.
Zhang
C.
,
Jiang
M.
and
Lu
A.
(
2013
)
Considerations of traditional Chinese medicine as adjunct therapy in the management of ulcerative colitis
.
Clin. Rev. Allergy Immunol.
44
,
274
283
[PubMed]
38.
Zhang
R.
,
Zhu
X.
,
Bai
H.
and
Ning
K.
(
2019
)
Network Pharmacology Databases for Traditional Chinese Medicine: Review and Assessment
.
Front. Pharmacol.
10
,
123
[PubMed]
39.
Bhattacharyya
A.
,
Chattopadhyay
R.
,
Mitra
S.
and
Crowe
S.E.
(
2014
)
Oxidative stress: an essential factor in the pathogenesis of gastrointestinal mucosal diseases
.
Physiol. Rev.
94
,
329
354
[PubMed]
40.
de Barrios
O.
,
Sanchez-Moral
L.
,
Cortés
M.
,
Ninfali
C.
,
Profitós-Pelejà
N.
,
Martínez-Campanario
M.C.
et al.
(
2019
)
ZEB1 promotes inflammation and progression towards inflammation-driven carcinoma through repression of the DNA repair glycosylase MPG in epithelial cells
.
Gut.
1
13
[PubMed]
41.
Banan
A.
,
Choudhary
S.
,
Zhang
Y.
,
Fields
J.Z.
and
Keshavarzian
A.
(
1999
)
Ethanol-induced barrier dysfunction and its prevention by growth factors in human intestinal monolayers: evidence for oxidative and cytoskeletal mechanisms
.
J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther.
291
,
1075
1085
[PubMed]
42.
Amati
L.
,
Caradonna
L.
,
Leandro
G.
,
Magrone
T.
,
Minenna
M.
,
Faleo
G.
et al.
(
2003
)
Immune abnormalities and endotoxemia in patients with ulcerative colitis and in their first degree relatives: attempts at neutralizing endotoxin-mediated effects
.
Curr. Pharm. Des.
9
,
1937
1945
[PubMed]
43.
Sperandeo
P.
,
Martorana
A.M.
and
Polissi
A.
(
2017
)
Lipopolysaccharide biogenesis and transport at the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria
.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta Mol. Cell. Biol. Lipids
1862
,
1451
1460
[PubMed]
44.
Brooks
D.
,
Barr
L.C.
,
Wiscombe
S.
,
McAuley
D.F.
,
Simpson
A.J.
and
Rostron
A.J.
(
2020
)
Human lipopolysaccharide models provide mechanistic and therapeutic insights into systemic and pulmonary inflammation
.
Eur. Respir. J.
56
,
1901298
[PubMed]
45.
Lin
T.L.
,
Shu
C.C.
,
Chen
Y.M.
,
Lu
J.J.
,
Wu
T.S.
,
Lai
W.F.
et al.
(
2020
)
Like Cures Like: Pharmacological Activity of Anti-Inflammatory Lipopolysaccharides From Gut Microbiome
.
Front. Pharmacol.
11
,
554
[PubMed]
46.
Iboshi
Y.
,
Nakamura
K.
,
Fukaura
K.
,
Iwasa
T.
,
Ogino
H.
,
Sumida
Y.
et al.
(
2017
)
Increased IL-17A/IL-17F expression ratio represents the key mucosal T helper/regulatory cell-related gene signature paralleling disease activity in ulcerative colitis
.
J. Gastroenterol.
52
,
315
326
[PubMed]
47.
Ueno
A.
,
Jeffery
L.
,
Kobayashi
T.
,
Hibi
T.
,
Ghosh
S.
and
Jijon
H.
(
2018
)
Th17 plasticity and its relevance to inflammatory bowel disease
.
J. Autoimmun.
87
,
38
49
[PubMed]
48.
Lin
J.X.
and
Leonard
W.J.
(
2019
)
Fine-Tuning Cytokine Signals
.
Annu. Rev. Immunol.
37
,
295
324
[PubMed]
49.
Salas
A.
,
Hernandez-Rocha
C.
,
Duijvestein
M.
,
Faubion
W.
,
McGovern
D.
,
Vermeire
S.
et al.
(
2020
)
JAK-STAT pathway targeting for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease
.
Nat. Rev. Gastroenterol. Hepatol.
17
,
323
337
50.
He
J.
,
Song
Y.
,
Li
G.
,
Xiao
P.
,
Liu
Y.
,
Xue
Y.
et al.
(
2019
)
Fbxw7 increases CCL2/7 in CX3CR1hi macrophages to promote intestinal inflammation
.
J. Clin. Invest.
129
,
3877
3893
[PubMed]
51.
Parisinos
C.A.
,
Serghiou
S.
,
Katsoulis
M.
,
George
M.J.
,
Patel
R.S.
,
Hemingway
H.
et al.
(
2018
)
Variation in Interleukin 6 Receptor Gene Associates With Risk of Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
.
Gastroenterology
155
,
303e302
306e302
52.
Vilgelm
A.E.
and
Richmond
A.
(
2019
)
Chemokines Modulate Immune Surveillance in Tumorigenesis, Metastasis, and Response to Immunotherapy
.
Front. Immunol.
10
,
333
[PubMed]
53.
Ha
H.
,
Debnath
B.
and
Neamati
N.
(
2017
)
Role of the CXCL8-CXCR1/2 Axis in Cancer and Inflammatory Diseases
.
Theranostics
7
,
1543
1588
[PubMed]
54.
Fisher
R.C.
,
Bellamkonda
K.
,
Alex Molina
L.
,
Xiang
S.
,
Liska
D.
,
Sarvestani
S.K.
et al.
(
2019
)
Disrupting Inflammation-Associated CXCL8-CXCR1 Signaling Inhibits Tumorigenicity Initiated by Sporadic- and Colitis-Colon Cancer Stem Cells
.
Neoplasia
21
,
269
281
[PubMed]
55.
Pott
J.
and
Maloy
K.J.
(
2018
)
Epithelial autophagy controls chronic colitis by reducing TNF-induced apoptosis
.
Autophagy
14
,
1460
1461
[PubMed]
56.
Franke
A.
,
Balschun
T.
,
Karlsen
T.H.
,
Sventoraityte
J.
,
Nikolaus
S.
,
Mayr
G.
et al.
(
2008
)
Sequence variants in IL10, ARPC2 and multiple other loci contribute to ulcerative colitis susceptibility
.
Nat. Genet.
40
,
1319
1323
[PubMed]
57.
Esplugues
E.
,
Huber
S.
,
Gagliani
N.
,
Hauser
A.E.
,
Town
T.
,
Wan
Y.Y.
et al.
(
2011
)
Control of TH17 cells occurs in the small intestine
.
Nature
475
,
514
518
[PubMed]
58.
Wynn
T.A.
(
2015
)
Type 2 cytokines: mechanisms and therapeutic strategies
.
Nat. Rev. Immunol.
15
,
271
282
[PubMed]
59.
Rückert
Y.
,
Schindler
U.
,
Heinig
T.
,
Nikolaus
S.
,
Raedler
A.
and
Schreiber
S.
(
1996
)
IL-4 Signaling Mechanisms in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Mononuclear Phagocytes
.
Inflamm. Bowel Dis.
2
,
244
252
[PubMed]
60.
Tu
L.
,
Chen
J.
,
Zhang
H.
and
Duan
L.
(
2017
)
Interleukin-4 Inhibits Regulatory T Cell Differentiation through Regulating CD103+ Dendritic Cells
.
Front. Immunol.
8
,
214
[PubMed]
61.
Jayme
T.S.
,
Leung
G.
,
Wang
A.
,
Workentine
M.L.
,
Rajeev
S.
,
Shute
A.
et al.
(
2020
)
Human interleukin-4-treated regulatory macrophages promote epithelial wound healing and reduce colitis in a mouse model
.
Sci. Adv.
6
,
eaba4376
[PubMed]
62.
Malek
T.R.
(
2008
)
The biology of interleukin-2
.
Annu. Rev. Immunol.
26
,
453
479
[PubMed]
63.
Fontenot
J.D.
,
Rasmussen
J.P.
,
Gavin
M.A.
and
Rudensky
A.Y.
(
2005
)
A function for interleukin 2 in Foxp3-expressing regulatory T cells
.
Nat. Immunol.
6
,
1142
1151
[PubMed]
64.
Lee
H.
,
Son
Y.S.
,
Lee
M.O.
,
Ryu
J.W.
,
Park
K.
,
Kwon
O.
et al.
(
2020
)
Low-dose interleukin-2 alleviates dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis in mice by recovering intestinal integrity and inhibiting AKT-dependent pathways
.
Theranostics
10
,
5048
5063
[PubMed]
65.
Musso
A.
,
Dentelli
P.
,
Carlino
A.
,
Chiusa
L.
,
Repici
A.
,
Sturm
A.
et al.
(
2005
)
Signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 signaling pathway: an essential mediator of inflammatory bowel disease and other forms of intestinal inflammation
.
Inflamm. Bowel Dis.
11
,
91
98
[PubMed]
66.
Mudter
J.
,
Weigmann
B.
,
Bartsch
B.
,
Kiesslich
R.
,
Strand
D.
,
Galle
P.R.
et al.
(
2005
)
Activation pattern of signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) factors in inflammatory bowel diseases
.
Am. J. Gastroenterol.
100
,
64
72
[PubMed]
67.
Durant
L.
,
Watford
W.T.
,
Ramos
H.L.
,
Laurence
A.
,
Vahedi
G.
,
Wei
L.
et al.
(
2010
)
Diverse targets of the transcription factor STAT3 contribute to T cell pathogenicity and homeostasis
.
Immunity
32
,
605
615
[PubMed]
68.
Jairath
V.
,
Khanna
R.
and
Feagan
B.G.
(
2017
)
Alicaforsen for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease
.
Expert Opin. Investig. Drugs
26
,
991
997
[PubMed]
69.
Dustin
M.L.
,
Bivona
T.G.
and
Philips
M.R.
(
2004
)
Membranes as messengers in T cell adhesion signaling
.
Nat. Immunol.
5
,
363
372
[PubMed]
70.
Watanabe
T.
and
Fan
J.
(
1998
)
Atherosclerosis and inflammation mononuclear cell recruitment and adhesion molecules with reference to the implication of ICAM-1/LFA-1 pathway in atherogenesis
.
Int. J. Cardiol.
66
,
S45
S53
,
discussion S55
[PubMed]
71.
Etienne-Manneville
S.
,
Chaverot
N.
,
Strosberg
A.D.
and
Couraud
P.O.
(
1999
)
ICAM-1-coupled signaling pathways in astrocytes converge to cyclic AMP response element-binding protein phosphorylation and TNF-alpha secretion
.
J. Immunol.
163
,
668
674
[PubMed]
72.
Reyes-Farias
M.
and
Carrasco-Pozo
C.
(
2019
)
The Anti-Cancer Effect of Quercetin: Molecular Implications in Cancer Metabolism
.
Int. J. Mol. Sci.
20
,
3177
[PubMed]
73.
McKay
T.B.
and
Karamichos
D.
(
2017
)
Quercetin and the ocular surface: What we know and where we are going
.
Exp. Biol. Med. (Maywood)
242
,
565
572
[PubMed]
74.
Carullo
G.
,
Cappello
A.R.
,
Frattaruolo
L.
,
Badolato
M.
,
Armentano
B.
and
Aiello
F.
(
2017
)
Quercetin and derivatives: useful tools in inflammation and pain management
.
Future Med. Chem.
9
,
79
93
[PubMed]
75.
Dicarlo
M.
,
Teti
G.
,
Verna
G.
,
Liso
M.
,
Cavalcanti
E.
,
Sila
A.
et al.
(
2019
)
Quercetin Exposure Suppresses the Inflammatory Pathway in Intestinal Organoids from Winnie Mice
.
Int. J. Mol. Sci.
20
,
5771
[PubMed]
76.
Sánchez de Medina
F.
,
Vera
B.
,
Gálvez
J.
and
Zarzuelo
A.
(
2002
)
Effect of quercitrin on the early stages of hapten induced colonic inflammation in the rat
.
Life Sci.
70
,
3097
3108
[PubMed]
77.
Dey
P.
(
2019
)
Gut microbiota in phytopharmacology: A comprehensive overview of concepts, reciprocal interactions, biotransformations and mode of actions
.
Pharmacol. Res.
147
,
104367
[PubMed]
78.
Nie
J.
,
Zhang
L.
,
Zhao
G.
and
Du
X.
(
2019
)
Quercetin reduces atherosclerotic lesions by altering the gut microbiota and reducing atherogenic lipid metabolites
.
J. Appl. Microbiol.
127
,
1824
1834
[PubMed]
79.
Guimbaud
R.
,
Bertrand
V.
,
Chauvelot-Moachon
L.
,
Quartier
G.
,
Vidon
N.
,
Giroud
J.P.
et al.
(
1998
)
Network of inflammatory cytokines and correlation with disease activity in ulcerative colitis
.
Am. J. Gastroenterol.
93
,
2397
2404
[PubMed]
80.
Abraham
C.
,
Dulai
P.S.
,
Vermeire
S.
and
Sandborn
W.J.
(
2017
)
Lessons Learned From Trials Targeting Cytokine Pathways in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
.
Gastroenterology
152
,
374.e374
388.e374
[PubMed]
This is an open access article published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY).

Supplementary data