TCMSP: a database of systems pharmacology for drug discovery from herbal medicines

Jinlong Ru(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Peng Li(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Jinan Wang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Wei Zhou(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Bohui Li(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Chao Huang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Pidong Li(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Zihu Guo(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Weiyang Tao(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Yinfeng Yang(Dalian University of Technology), Xue Xu(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Yan Li(Dalian University of Technology), Yonghua Wang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Ling Yang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics)
Journal of Cheminformatics
April 16, 2014
Cited by 4,974Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Modern medicine often clashes with traditional medicine such as Chinese herbal medicine because of the little understanding of the underlying mechanisms of action of the herbs. In an effort to promote integration of both sides and to accelerate the drug discovery from herbal medicines, an efficient systems pharmacology platform that represents ideal information convergence of pharmacochemistry, ADME properties, drug-likeness, drug targets, associated diseases and interaction networks, are urgently needed. DESCRIPTION: The traditional Chinese medicine systems pharmacology database and analysis platform (TCMSP) was built based on the framework of systems pharmacology for herbal medicines. It consists of all the 499 Chinese herbs registered in the Chinese pharmacopoeia with 29,384 ingredients, 3,311 targets and 837 associated diseases. Twelve important ADME-related properties like human oral bioavailability, half-life, drug-likeness, Caco-2 permeability, blood-brain barrier and Lipinski's rule of five are provided for drug screening and evaluation. TCMSP also provides drug targets and diseases of each active compound, which can automatically establish the compound-target and target-disease networks that let users view and analyze the drug action mechanisms. It is designed to fuel the development of herbal medicines and to promote integration of modern medicine and traditional medicine for drug discovery and development. CONCLUSIONS: The particular strengths of TCMSP are the composition of the large number of herbal entries, and the ability to identify drug-target networks and drug-disease networks, which will help revealing the mechanisms of action of Chinese herbs, uncovering the nature of TCM theory and developing new herb-oriented drugs. TCMSP is freely available at http://sm.nwsuaf.edu.cn/lsp/tcmsp.php.


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