RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The Effect of Compound Kushen Injection on Cancer Cells: Integrated Identification of Candidate Molecular Mechanisms JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 503318 DO 10.1101/503318 A1 Cui, Jian A1 Qu, Zhipeng A1 Harata-Lee, Yuka A1 Shen, Hanyuan A1 Nwe Aung, Thazin A1 Wang, Wei A1 Daniel Kortschak, R. A1 Adelson, David L YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/12/21/503318.abstract AB Background Because Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) preparations are often combinations of multiple herbs containing hundreds of compounds, they have been difficult to study. Compound Kushen Injection (CKI) is a complex mixture cancer treatment used in Chinese hospitals for over twenty years.Purpose To demonstrate that a systematic analysis of molecular changes resulting from complex mixtures of bioactives from TCM can identify a core set of differentially expressed (DE) genes and a reproducible set of candidate pathways.Study Design We used a cancer cell culture model to measure the effect of CKI on cell cycle phases, apoptosis and correlate those phenotypes with CKI induced changes in gene expression.Methods We treated cancer cells with CKI in order to generate and analyse high-throughput transcriptome data from two cancer cell lines. We integrated these differential gene expression results with previously reported results.Results CKI induced cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis and altered the expression of 363 core candidate genes associated with cell cycle, apoptosis, DNA replication/repair and various cancer pathways. Of these, 7 are clinically relevant to cancer diagnosis or therapy and 14 are cell cycle regulators, and most of these 21 candidates are downregulated by CKI. Comparison of our core candidate genes to a database of plant medicinal compounds and their effects on gene expression identified one-to-one, one-to-many and many-to-many regulatory relationships between compounds in CKI and DE genes.Conclusions By identifying promising candidate pathways and genes associated with CKI based on our transcriptome-based analysis, we have shown this approach is useful for the systematic analysis of molecular changes resulting from complex mixtures of bioactives.AbbreviationsDEdifferentially expressedTCMtraditional Chinese medicineCKIcompound Kushen injectionGOGene OntologyDODisease OntologyKEGGKyoto Encyclopedia of Gene and GenomesPIpropidium iodide.