SymMap: an integrative database of traditional Chinese medicine enhanced by symptom mapping

Yang Wu(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine), Feilong Zhang(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine), Kuo Yang(Beijing Jiaotong University), Shuangsang Fang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dechao Bu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hui Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liang Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hairuo Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kuo Gao(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine), Wei Wang(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine), Xuezhong Zhou(Beijing Jiaotong University), Yi Zhao(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine), Jianxin Chen(Beijing University of Chinese Medicine)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 22, 2018
Cited by 550Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Recently, the pharmaceutical industry has heavily emphasized phenotypic drug discovery (PDD), which relies primarily on knowledge about phenotype changes associated with diseases. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) provides a massive amount of information on natural products and the clinical symptoms they are used to treat, which are the observable disease phenotypes that are crucial for clinical diagnosis and treatment. Curating knowledge of TCM symptoms and their relationships to herbs and diseases will provide both candidate leads and screening directions for evidence-based PDD programs. Therefore, we present SymMap, an integrative database of traditional Chinese medicine enhanced by symptom mapping. We manually curated 1717 TCM symptoms and related them to 499 herbs and 961 symptoms used in modern medicine based on a committee of 17 leading experts practicing TCM. Next, we collected 5235 diseases associated with these symptoms, 19 595 herbal constituents (ingredients) and 4302 target genes, and built a large heterogeneous network containing all of these components. Thus, SymMap integrates TCM with modern medicine in common aspects at both the phenotypic and molecular levels. Furthermore, we inferred all pairwise relationships among SymMap components using statistical tests to give pharmaceutical scientists the ability to rank and filter promising results to guide drug discovery. The SymMap database can be accessed at http://www.symmap.org/ and https://www.bioinfo.org/symmap.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis