Skip to main content

Herb network construction and co-module analysis for uncovering the combination rule of traditional Chinese herbal formulae

Abstract

Background

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is characterized by the wide use of herbal formulae, which are capable of systematically treating diseases determined by interactions among various herbs. However, the combination rule of TCM herbal formulae remains a mystery due to the lack of appropriate methods.

Methods

From a network perspective, we established a method called Distance-based Mutual Information Model (DMIM) to identify useful relationships among herbs in numerous herbal formulae. DMIM combines mutual information entropy and “between-herb-distance” to score herb interactions and construct herb network. To evaluate the efficacy of the DMIM-extracted herb network, we conducted in vitro assays to measure the activities of strongly connected herbs and herb pairs. Moreover, using the networked Liu-wei-di-huang (LWDH) formula as an example, we proposed a novel concept of “co-module” across herb-biomolecule-disease multilayer networks to explore the potential combination mechanism of herbal formulae.

Results

DMIM, when used for retrieving herb pairs, achieves a good balance among the herb’s frequency, independence, and distance in herbal formulae. A herb network constructed by DMIM from 3865 Collaterals-related herbal formulae can not only nicely recover traditionally-defined herb pairs and formulae, but also generate novel anti-angiogenic herb ingredients (e.g. Vitexicarpin with IC50=3.2 μM, and Timosaponin A-III with IC50=3.4 μM) as well as herb pairs with synergistic or antagonistic effects. Based on gene and phenotype information associated with both LWDH herbs and LWDH-treated diseases, we found that LWDH-treated diseases show high phenotype similarity and identified certain “co-modules” enriched in cancer pathways and neuro-endocrine-immune pathways, which may be responsible for the action of treating different diseases by the same LWDH formula.

Conclusions

DMIM is a powerful method to identify the combination rule of herbal formulae and lead to new discoveries. We also provide the first evidence that the co-module across multilayer networks may underlie the combination mechanism of herbal formulae and demonstrate the potential of network biology approaches in the studies of TCM.

Background

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is an important part of the current medical system. It aims to restore the whole-body balance in patients by using herbal formula (Fang-Ji in Mandarin), which is usually composed of two or more medicinal herbs and has the capacity of systematically treating disease [1]. Naturally occurring herbs and herbal ingredients organized into certain formula have been shown to have potential interaction effects. These include mutual enhancement, mutual assistance, mutual restraint and mutual antagonism [2, 3]. For example, synergistic interactions occur when the efficacy of combinations of herbs (or ingredients) is greater than the summed responses of each individual herb or ingredient. Adams et al. [4] recently reported the synergistic, additive and antagonistic effects exerted by different combinations of six herbal extracts on the viability of prostate cancer cell lines. Wang reported that a Realgar-Indigo naturalis formula is beneficial for the treatment of promyelocytic leukemia; the synergistic effects exerted by several components of this formula are well documented [5]. Ung et al. [6] conducted an analysis of 394 TCM herb pairs and 2470 non-TCM herb pairs using artificial intelligence methods and considering four classes of herbal properties as features including character, taste, meridian, and toxicity level. Their study revealed that herb pairs in TCM contain features distinguishable from those of non-TCM herb pairs. Schmidt et al.[7] believed that mixtures of interacting compounds produced by plants may become a valuable asset and an important resource for drug discovery, especially for the development of combinational therapeutics.

However, there is still a lack of appropriate methods to learn how and why many herbs are grouped in certain formulae, and the combination rule embedding numerous herbal formulae remain unknown. Traditionally herbs have taken different roles in a typical herbal formula; they are usually expressed in the organization order as Master, Adviser, Soldier and Guide (MASG), each of which is given certain natural properties including Cold, Cool, Neutral, Warm or Hot. Understanding the combination rule of herbal formulae will not only benefit the modernization of TCM but may also be helpful for the way drugs are studied. A good example of the potential of TCM involves angiogenesis. TCM is known to be effective for the treatment of angiogenesis which is the main type of pathological vascular growth associated with various diseases such as cancer and rheumatoid arthritis [8, 9]. We know that more than 60% of the current cancer chemotherapeutic agents are natural products or small molecules based on natural product leads [10, 11]. Many pro-angiogenic and anti-angiogenic plant components are potentially useful for curing angiogenic disorders and are well tolerated [9]. Especially, herbs originally used for treating “Collaterals (Luo in Mandarin) diseases” in TCM have been found to be active on angiogenic disorders [12]. As a consequence, combining traditional herbal formulae with existing biological knowledge might allow researchers to rapidly identify combination treatments for angiogenic disorders.

Recently, a remarkable development has been the use of systems biology, especially network biology, in drug study. This methodology has revealed the systematic mechanisms of complex disease and has highlighted the paradigm shift from “one drug, one target” to “multicomponent therapeutics, biological networks” [13, 14]. Even though the scientific community has high expectations for systems pharmacology, this field is still in its infancy because of a poor understanding of cell behaviours and drug-protein interactions. TCM formula is considered to be an empirical system of multicomponent therapeutics which potentially meets the demands of treating a number of complex diseases in an integrated manner [3, 14, 15]. So, in order to find a relationship between groups of drugs and complex diseases, it is important to introduce a powerful approach to bridge the tradition and the modern, and pursue a priori knowledge about the combination rules embedded in TCM. In this work, we developed a Distance-based Mutual Information Model (DMIM) to extract the herb relationships from plentiful herbal formulae. This method was then used to construct the “herb network” from 3865 Collaterals-related herbal formulae, following by in vitro experiments designed to evaluate the angiogenic effects and synergistic properties of strongly connected herbs and herb pairs. A new concept of “co-module” was further proposed and network biology analyses were conducted to explore the potential combination mechanism of the networked herbal formulae.

Methods

Data sources of herbal formulae

Candidate herbal formulae selection

TCM values the “Collaterals” theory and therapy. Using “Collaterals (Luo)” as the keyword, we searched the SIRC-TCM Herbal Formula database (http://www.tcm120.com/1w2k/tcm_recipe.asp) which contains 0.14 million herbal formulae. Then we collected 3865 herbal formulae with formula names and functions, or herb’s meridian tropism (Gui-jing in Mandarin), or targeted syndromes and diseases containing the keyword. We standardized the herbal formulae by substituting all the polysemes, synonyms and acronyms of the herbs in the dataset using the standardized Herb Name list. The standardized Herb Name list consists of 737 herbs. The 3865 Collaterals-related herbal formulae, as examples, will be subject to the following DMIM analysis.

Traditionally-defined herb pairs

The herb pair is the basic unit of a herbal formula. To evaluate the reliability and utility of the DMIM-extracted herb network, 600 traditionally-defined herb pairs recorded in [16] and 301 herb pairs from [17] were collected. This resulted in 775 non-redundant traditionally-defined herb pairs made up of 737 separate herbs in the Collaterals-related herbal formulae.

Establishment of DMIM Scoring System

Numerical representation for herbal formulae

In the DMIM, we turn the normalized formula data into a numeral matrix to indicate the relative position of the herbs in a formula. Assuming there are a total of n herbs and m formulae, we assign serial numbers to all the herbs from 1 to n. As illustrated in Table 1, we use a m×n matrix A = (a ij ) m * n to indicate the formula where the i th row vector denotes the components of the i th formula, and a ij is the number of the position of the j th herb in i th formula ( a ij =0 means herb j is absent in formula i). To eliminate the impact of the total number of herbs in one formula, we define the matrix B=(b ij ) as where k denotes the total number of herbs in a formula.

Table 1 Examples for the numerical representation of herbal formulae

From this we had matrix B , where b ij indicates the relative position of herb j in the formula i. Finally, the real data set is represented by a 3865×737 matrix. Then, for given two herbs, x and y, we deduce that the tendency of x and y to form a herb pair is dependent on two factors: mutual information entropy characteristics and the average distance between herbs.

Mutual information entropy

To begin with, we calculate the traditional mutual information entropy [21] for x and y as:. Here is the frequency that herb x and herb y occurred, and I(x, y,i) is the indicator function of x and y, showing whether herb x and y coexist in the formula i.is the frequency of herb x. It is the same with P(y). A large value of MI(x, y) indicates a strong correlation between herb x and herb y .

Between-herb-distance

Considering a later order indicates a less importance in the organization of Master, Adviser, Soldier or Guide herbs in a herbal formula, we assume that the further the distance between two herbs in a formula, the less likely they are to be relevant to one another. The distance between herb x and herb y in the i th formula, called the “between-herb-distance”, is defined as: d(x, y, i) = |B(x,i) - B(y, i)|. The average distance of herb x and herb y in the dataset is.

DMIM scoring system

The DMIM combines the mutual information (MI) entropy characteristics and the average distance between herbs (d) to form a scoring system,, which describes the tendency of herb x and herb y to form a herb pair. So when two herb pairs share the same information entropy, the one with the smaller average distance shows a stronger connection. When two herb pairs have the same average distance, the one with the larger information entropy shows a greater interaction.

Evaluation of the DMIM-extracted herb network

In vitro assays for evaluating angiogenic activities of DMIM-extracted herbs

We selected major herbal ingredients from DMIM outputs to evaluate angiogenic activities. Two kinds of endothelial cell proliferation assays, namely with or without vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) stimulation, were used to evaluate respectively the anti-angiogenic or the pro-angiogenic activity of herbal ingredients. Only the positive results were reported. Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECs) from Cascade Biologics (Portland, USA) were cultured in endothelial cell medium (Sciencell Research Laboratory) together with 10% fetal bovine serum and endothelial cell growth supplement. This mixture was sub-cultured using a 1:2 ratio with Trypsin/EDTA solution provided by the manufacturer. Herbal ingredients were purchased from the National Institute for the Control of Pharmaceutical and Biological Products, China. HUVECs (5×103 per well) in a 96-well plate were starved with 0.1% FBS medium and then treated with or without VEGF (5-10 ng/ml) along with different concentrations of herbal ingredients for 48 hours. Cell viability was determined by Cell Counting Kit (CCK-8, Dojindo, Japan) following the measurement of optical density values using MRX Revelation Absorbance Reader.

Herb interaction measurement of DMIM-extracted herb pairs

We investigated whether combination effects were produced by DMIM-extracted herb pairs and whether there was a role for the natural properties of the herbs. The highest single compound model [18] was used as the reference model for measuring additivity to identify herbal interactions such as synergism or antagonism. The combination effects were determined by selecting the greatest effect produced by each of the combination’s individual compounds using similar concentrations as in the combination. Positive or negative deviations from this predicted additivity demonstrated synergistic or antagonistic interactions.

Co-module analysis for the DMIM-extracted herbal formula

Co-module concept, herbal formula selection and biological data preparation

To further explore the combination mechanism of DMIM-extracted herbal formulae, we propose a new concept of “co-module” based on the assumption that there may exist certain consistent and common biological patterns, which act as “co-modules”, underlying networked herbs and their targeted diseases simultaneously. We took a famous formula, “Liu-wei-di-huang” (LWDH, also known as Rehmannia Six, Six Ingredient Rehmannia or Rokumi-gan), as an example, since we found that all six herbs of this formula are connected closely in the DMIM-extracted herb network including Shan-zhu-yu (Fructus Corni), Ze-xie (Rhizoma Alismatis), Dan-pi (Cortex Moutan), Di-huang (Radix Rehmaniae), Fu-ling (Poria Cocos) and Shan-yao (Rhizoma Dioscoreae). Then, we collected the biological entities (genes or gene products) affected by individual herbs (compounds) of LWDH from PubMed and China National Knowledge Infrastructure (http://www.cnki.net). This resulted in a total of 146 manually collected genes or gene products, called LWDH genes, contributed respectively to the actions of the LWDH constituent six herbs. 127 LWDH genes were nodes of the protein-protein interaction (PPI) network (HPRD, release 7). Next, we collected the documented diseases for which the LWDH formula may serve as a potential treatment. This resulted in 16 diseases containing 9 types of cancer (Prostate cancer, Melanoma, Stomach cancer, Breast cancer, Esophageal cancer, Lung cancer, Hepatocellular carcinoma, Multiple myeloma and Leukemia), 5 diseases with dysfunction of the neuro-endocrine-immune-metabolism system (Parkinson disease, Asthma, Allergy, Rheumatoid arthritis and Diabetes), and 2 cardiovascular disorders (Hypertension and Atherosclerosis) (see literature in Additional file 1). By mapping these 16 diseases into the OMIM database, we identified 73 exclusive phenotypes with OMIM IDs and obtained 224 disease genes called LWDH-disease genes, 173 of which were networked in HPRD.

Performing co-module analysis for LWDH and LWDH-treated diseases

We conducted the co-module analysis from the following three aspects. (1) We analyzed the enriched KEGG pathways for either LWDH genes or LWDH-disease genes with a false discovery rate less than 0.05 by Fisher Exact test in DAVID [19]. (2) We evaluated the “closeness”(average shortest path) between LWDH genes and LWDH-disease genes in the PPI network and used the permutation test to calculate the statistical significance of the average shortest path. Here we kept the original 127 LWDH genes and randomly selected other 173 disease genes from 1273 networked genes in all 3074 non-redundant disease genes stored in the OMIM moridmap.txt (Feb 22, 2008); this was repeated independently 2000 times. (3) We calculated the average phenotype similarity score determined by the cosine of vector angle [20] of 73 phenotypes of LWDH-diseases, and evaluated the statistical significance by comparison with randomly selected 73 OMIM phenotypes for 2000 times.

Statistical analysis

The mutual information statistics were transformed to equivalent odds ratios using monotonic transform and then subjected to standard χ2 test. In doing so, we used χ2 test to test whether the occurrence of the two herbs in the formulae is correlated with each other by generating a contingency table. Experimental data from the in vitro assay were presented as mean±SD (Standard Deviation) of four independent experiments with six repeat wells for each experiment. The statistical difference between treatments was determined by the t test.

Results

DMIM-extracted herb network from Collaterals-related formulae

DMIM was used for extracting the combination rule of 3865 Collaterals-related formulae. In all 3865 formulae, we found that eight of the top 10 most frequently occurring herbs (Table 2) are reported to pro-angiogenesis or anti-angiogenesis activity [9, 22]. This provides evidence that the Collaterals-related formulae may have a possible relationship with angiogenic disorders. Each of the top 100 DMIM-extracted herb pairs had statistical significance (P < 0.05, x2 test). Table 3 summarized the top 20 DMIM-extracted herb pairs with the highest rankings; six of these herb pairs are novel when compared with traditionally-defined herb pairs [16, 17]. Interestingly, we found that Gan-cao (Radix Rhizoma Glycyrrhizae), a commonly-used supplementary herb (“Guide” in MASG), ranked 2nd with a frequency of 38.37% in all 3865 herbal formulae. However, the position of herb pairs containing Gan-cao fell to 195 (Table 3), suggesting that the DMIM method was able to balance the frequency, independence, and relative distance in the herbal formulae. Figure1 shows that we constructed a herb network by using the interactions of the top 100 herb pairs extracted by DMIM, in which we found that full or part of six classical herbal formulae are nicely recovered. The distinct modular feature is also observed from the DMIM-extracted herb network.

Table 2 Top 10 herbs in 3865 Collaterals-related formulae
Table 3 Top 20 DMIM-extracted herb pairs
Figure 1
figure 1

DMIM-extracted herb network from 3865 herbal formula. This herb network is constructed from the top 100 herb pairs extracted by DMIM. Herbs with different natural properties and six classical herbal formulae are presented in the network. Data about only two interacted herbs are not shown.

Measurement of angiogenic activities for DMIM-extracted modular herbs

As shown in Figure 1, the hub module or the interconnected sub-network in the DMIM-extracted herb network is centered on the most frequently occurring herbs, Chuan-xiong (Rhizoma Chuanxiong) and Dang-gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis). We extended this hub module to all herb pairs with statistical significance (χ2 test, P<0.05) (Figure 2A) and assumed that herbs presented in this module could have potential angiogenic activities. By selecting the major herbal ingredients in these herbs and taking their natural properties into consideration, the following in vitro experimental results support our hypothesis. As shown in Figure 2B, in the hub module, Vitexicarpin (VIT) and Timosaponin A-III (TSA) as major ingredients taken from two herbs with Cold properties were very active on inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation (IC50VIT=3.2μM; IC50TSA=3.4μM respectively). Also, Hydroxysafflor yellow A (HYA) and Astragaloside (AST) from herbs with Hot properties had partial pro-angiogenesis activities when compared with the VEGF treatment group. Another trend (Figure 2B) was that Berberine from Huang-bai (Cortex Phellodendri) and Tetramethylpyrazine (TMP) from Chuan-xiong had a biphasic effect on endothelial cells proliferation. Lower doses caused an increase in cell proliferation whereas higher doses resulted in an anti-angiogenic response. Overall, the experimental results validated the potential angiogenic activities of the modular herbs.

Figure 2
figure 2

Angiogenic activities of major ingredients in DMIM-extracted herbs. A. The extended hub module in DMIM-extracted herb network. Each node corresponds to a herb colored according to their natural properties. The size of each node is proportional to the number of herbs connecting to it. A solid line links a herb pair while the width of the lines is proportional to the DMIM score. B. Experimental results of the herb ingredients in the module. The pro- or anti-angiogenic effects of each herb were delineated by pro- or anti-angiogenic screening model respectively.

Measurement of DMIM-extracted modular herb interactions

We evaluated whether modular herbs with different properties had potential combination effects. Figure 3 shows that HUVECs were treated with different compound combinations in a 6×6 dose matrix using the same conditions as the cell growth assay. By using the highest single compound model [18] we found that TMP (from Chuan-xiong with Warm properties) in combination with HYA (from Hong-hua with Warm properties) caused moderate synergistic pro-angiogenic activity, whereas antagonistic effects were observed when TMP was combined with AST (from Huang-qi with Warm properties). Noticeably, TMP and TSA (from Zhi-mu with Cool properties) produced obvious antagonism at higher concentrations (Figure 3). We also observed that the traditional herb pairs Chuan-xiong and Huang-qi, and the novel herb pairs Chuan-xiong and Hong-hua identified by DMIM exhibited clear combination effects on endothelial cell proliferation. These results suggest that the different interaction patterns of herb pairs may be associated with their different herb properties, although this association remains unclear.

Figure 3
figure 3

Combination effects in DMIM-extracted herb pairs. According to the HSC model, the dose matrix indicates the combined response of TMP in combination with three other compounds at six different doses. The color of the gird denotes the level of cell growth stimulation or inhibition. The growth percentage and inhibition percentage were calculated by the pro- or anti-angiogenic screening model respectively (A, C and E). B, D and F show the calculated excess growth or inhibition percentage over the HSC additivity model. The percentage above or below zero denotes the combination with synergism or antagonism, respectively.

Co-module underlying DMIM-extracted herbal formula in treating different diseases

DMIM can recover and connect all six herbs of the Liu-wei-di-huang formula. This formula is reported to potentially treat 16 types of diseases (Additional file 1). Thus, we performed a co-module analysis to explore the potential combination mechanism of DMIM-extracted herbal formula. Table 4 shows that LWDH genes as well as LWDH-disease genes are mainly enriched in cancer pathways and neuro-endocrine-immune pathways (see Additional file 2 for detailed statistics). Moreover, based on the PPI network, it is noted that the average shortest path length is significantly smaller between LWDH genes and LWDH-disease genes than between LWDH genes and randomly selected disease genes (P<0.0001, 2000 permutations). This highlights the specificity of the LWDH for treating these 16 different diseases. In addition to this, the average phenotype similarity scores for these 16 LWDH diseases are higher than the scores of random controls (P=0.0248, 2000 permutations), suggesting that it might be possible to group together LWDH-treated diseases through a common molecular basis. These findings evidenced that LWDH might act on a common network target underlying these diseases, and we can capture the “one formula, different diseases” relationship from a co-module viewpoint based on multilayer networks of herb-biomolecule-disease (Figure 4).

Table 4 Enriched pathways of Liu-wei-di-huang genes and Liu-wei-di-huang-treated disease genes identified by DAVID
Figure 4
figure 4

The co-module underlying Liu-wei-di-huang formula and diseases. For the herb module, two herbs from the Liu-wei-di-huang are linked if they have common responsive genes. For the disease module, two diseases are linked if they have common disease genes. The width of the solid lines is scaled with the number of common herb or disease genes. All herb genes and disease genes are mapped to the protein-protein interaction network. A biomolecular module as a common network target and associated with both the herb module and the disease module is extracted with dashed lines.

Discussion

In this work, we proposed a distance-based mutual information model, DMIM, to uncover the combination rule embedded in herbal formulae, which not only uses mutual information entropy but also introduces a new factor, “between-herb-distance”, into measuring the tendency of two herbs to form an herb pair. This makes DMIM suitable for deciphering herbal formulae and distinguishes it from other analytical methods such as clustering. For example, herb1 and herb2 are often used together to reduce toxicity and side-effects, while herb2 and herb3 may be clustered into a single category because of their co-location in similar organs or meridians. According to the principles of clustering, herb1, herb2 and herb3 may be clustered into one category, but in reality, herb1 and herb3 have no inherent relationship. Moreover, the results of clustering are qualitative rather than quantitative and clustering does not show which herbs have a tendency to form herb pairs. DMIM avoids these pitfalls by calculating the mutual information entropy for each of the herbs and their “between-herb-distance”.

We demonstrated the reliability and usefulness of DMIM by using 3865 Collaterals-related herbal formulae. Firstly, we showed that the DMIM method retains the traditional combination rule of TCM. DMIM identified many herbal pairs which have already been defined (Table 3). We also found that the DMIM-extracted herb network identified six classical herbal formulae from the paired herbs (Figure 1), which are expressed as connected sub-networks. On the other hand, DMIM-extracted herb network can eliminate the disturbance from herbs such as Gan-cao (Radix Rhizoma Glycyrrhizae), a widely used “Guide” herb that coordinates the actions of other herbs in formulae, though it ranks at top 2 in 3865 herbal formulae.

Next, we showed that DMIM has the potential to discover angiogenic herbs and non-addictive herb pairs from TCM. This study found that the 10 most common herbs in the 3865 formulae had potential angiogenic effects (Table 2) [9, 22]. We also conducted in vitro assay to evaluate the extended hub module for Chuan-xiong (Rhizoma Chuanxiong) and Dang-gui (Radix Angelicae Sinensis) in the DMIM-extracted herb network (Figure 2A). As the ingredients of herbs are very complicated and the quality of herbs is still unstable, for simplify, this work used major ingredients of herbs to perform experiments. Results showed that the herbs or herb pairs in the hub modules produced anti-angiogenic or pro-angiogenic activities, suggesting that the modular herbs may have functional dependence. In particular, we detected the novel bioactivity of two herb ingredients which inhibited angiogenesis, including Vitexicarpin (IC50 = 3.2 μM) and Timosaponin A-III (IC50 = 3.4 μM) (Figure 2B). We also validated the synergistic effects produced by DMIM-extracted novel herb pairs such as Chuan-xiong and Hong-hua (Table 3 and Figure 3).

Additionally, in this study, we observed that the active compounds from the herbs with different natural properties might account for their different angiogenic responses (Figure 2B). For instance, major ingredients from Cool/Cold herbs tend to produce anti-angiogenic activities whereas major ingredients from Warm/Hot herbs tend to exert pro-angiogenic activities [22]. The dose-response relationship is another way to understand the characteristics of the herb’s natural properties. We found that Berberine and Tetramethylpyrazine can cause a pro-angiogenic effect at low dose and anti-angiogenic effects at high dose (Figure 2B), suggesting that some herbs may cause biphasic regulation if different dosing regimens are used. For herb interaction effects we assumed that herb pairs in a formula with the same properties were more likely to lead to synergistic interactions, whereas combinations with different properties were inclined to cause antagonism. As shown in Figure 3, combination effects from herb pairs with the same properties (e.g. Chuan-xiong and Hong-hua) and different properties (e.g. Chuan-xiong and Zhi-mu) support our assumption, but the combination of Chuan-xiong and Huang-qi is not the case, making it an open question whether or not herbal properties are related to herb combination behaviours.

Last but not least, we demonstrated that the DMIM-extracted herbal formula, Liu-wei-di-huang, may have its molecular basis for treating different diseases in a co-module manner (Figure 4). LWDH is one of the most famous TCM formulae developed during the Song dynasty in China. Results show that the six herbs in LWDH not only have high DMIM scores, but also connected closely with common responsive genes enriched in cancer pathways and neuro-endocrine-immune pathways (Table 4). Interestingly, LWDH genes show a significantly close relationship with LWDH-disease genes in the PPI network (P<0.0001), forming a co-module underlying herbal formula as well as different diseases. Moreover, the 16 LWDH-treated diseases mainly including cancer, neuro-endocrine-immune-metabolism, and cardiovascular disorders show high phenotype similarity scores (P=0.0248) and might share a overlapped molecular basis associated with the angiogenic processes as well as the imbalance of the human body [23, 24]. Such phenomena of “one formula, different diseases” reinforce the idea that different diseases with similar phenotypes might possess internal coherence [2527], and a group of diseases with similar mechanisms might be able to be treated by intervening their common network target [28, 29], which in turn illustrates the rationality of multicomponent therapies such as herbal formulae (Figure [4]). The novel concept of co-module throughout the multilayer networks of herb-biomolecule-diseases may promote our awareness of herbal formulae as well as multicomponent therapies.

DMIM is currently the first step towards building herb network from TCM herbal formula. For future work, DMIM could be generalized to mine synergistic combinations made up of more than two herbs by replacing the “between-herb-distance” with a properly defined index of the distance among multiple herbs in a formula or by introducing multivariate mutual information. As this work treats formula independently, we will take the redundancies and correlations between formulae into consideration for calculating the herb distance. The dose information and natural properties of herbs (as measures of interaction) are also the next step to create a multi-weight herb network. Moreover, we believe that the combination mechanism of herbal formulae will be more deeply identified in a “co-module” manner and contribute to the progression of the modern TCM as well as network pharmacological studies [13].

Conclusions

DMIM yields a systematic framework for scoring herb pairs and the resulted herb network can uncover some combination rules of TCM. We also provide preliminary clues that the “co-module” across multilayer networks of herb-biomolecule-disease may be responsible for the combination mechanism underlying herbal formulae. This study is the first step forward in exploring the unique theories of TCM herbal formula by network biology approaches and may also benefit the coming network pharmacology as well.

References

  1. Li S, Zhang ZQ, Wu LJ, Zhang XG, Li YD, Wang YY: Understanding ZHENG in traditional Chinese medicine in the context of neuro-endocrine-immune network. IET Syst Biol 2007, 1: 51–60. 10.1049/iet-syb:20060032

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  2. Williamson EM: Synergy and other interactions in phytomedicines. Phytomedicine 2001, 8: 401–409. 10.1078/0944-7113-00060

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  3. Patwardhan B, Gautam M: Botanical immunodrugs: scope and opportunities. Drug Discov Today 2005, 10: 495–502. 10.1016/S1359-6446(04)03357-4

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  4. Adams LS, Seeram NP, Hardy ML, Carpenter C, Heber D: Analysis of the interactions of botanical extract combinations against the viability of prostate cancer cell lines. Evid Based Complement Alternat Med 2006, 3: 117–124. 10.1093/ecam/nel001

    Article  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  5. Wang L, Zhou GB, Liu P, Song JH, Liang Y, Yan XJ, Xu F, Wang BS, Mao JH, Shen ZX, Chen SJ, Chen Z: Dissection of mechanisms of Chinese medicinal formula Realgar-Indigo naturalis as an effective treatment for promyelocytic leukemia. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2008, 105: 4826–4831. 10.1073/pnas.0712365105

    Article  PubMed Central  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  6. Ung CY, Li H, Cao ZW, Li YX, Chen YZ: Are herb-pairs of traditional Chinese medicine distinguishable from others? Pattern analysis and artificial intelligence classification study of traditionally defined herbal properties. J Ethnopharmacol 2007, 111: 371–377. 10.1016/j.jep.2006.11.037

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  7. Schmidt BM, Ribnicky DM, Lipsky PE, Raskin I: Revisiting the ancient concept of botanical therapeutics. Nat Chem Biol 2007, 3: 360–366. 10.1038/nchembio0707-360

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  8. Folkman J: Angiogenesis in cancer, vascular, rheumatoid and other disease. Nat Med 1995, 1: 27–30. 10.1038/nm0195-27

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  9. Fan TP, Yeh JC, Leung KW, Yue PY, Wong RN: Angiogenesis: from plants to blood vessels. Trends Pharmacol Sci 2006, 27: 297–309. 10.1016/j.tips.2006.04.006

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  10. Cragg GM, Newman DJ, Snader KM: Natural products in drug discovery and development. J Nat Prod 1997, 60: 52–60. 10.1021/np9604893

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Newman DJ, Cragg GM: Natural products as sources of new drugs over the last 25 years. J Nat Prod 2007, 70: 461–77. 10.1021/np068054v

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. Li S, Lu AP, Wang YY, Li YD: Suppressive effects of a Chinese herbal medicine Qing-Luo-Yin extract on the angiogenesis of collagen induced arthritis in rats. Am J Chin Med 2003, 31: 713–720. 10.1142/S0192415X03001430

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. Hopkins AL: Network pharmacology: the next paradigm in drug discovery. Nat Chem Biol 2008, 4: 682–690. 10.1038/nchembio.118

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Keith CT, Borisy AA, Stockwell BR: Multicomponent therapeutics for networked systems. Nat Rev Drug Discov 2005, 4: 71–78. 10.1038/nrd1609

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  15. Kitano H: A robustness-based approach to systems-oriented drug design. Nat Rev Drug Discov 2007, 6: 202–210. 10.1038/nrd2195

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Xu QH: Complete collection of Chinese herb pairs. China Press of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Beijing.; 1996. (In Chinese)

    Google Scholar 

  17. Wang F: Herb pairs in classical prescriptions. Academy Press, Beijing; 2005. (In Chinese)

    Google Scholar 

  18. Borisy AA, Elliott PJ, Hurst NW, Lee MS, Lehar J, Price ER, Serbedzija G, Zimmermann GR, Foley MA, Stockwell BR, Keith CT: Systematic discovery of multicomponent therapeutics. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2003, 100: 7977–7982. 10.1073/pnas.1337088100

    Article  PubMed Central  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  19. Huang da W, Sherman BT, Lempicki RA: Systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using DAVID bioinformatics resources. Nat Protoc 2009, 4: 44–57. 10.1038/nprot.2008.211

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  20. van Driel MA, Bruggeman J, Vriend G, Brunner HG, Leunissen JAM: A text-mining analysis of the human phenome. Eur J Hum Genet 2006, 14: 535–542. 10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201585

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Beeferman D, Berger A, Lafferty J: Statistical models for text segmentation. Machine Learning 1999, 34: 177–210. 10.1023/A:1007506220214

    Article  Google Scholar 

  22. Wang S, Zheng Z, Weng Y, Yu Y, Zhang D, Fan W, Dai R, Hu Z: Angiogenesis and anti-angiogenesis activity of Chinese medicinal herbal extracts. Life Sci 2004, 74: 2467–78. 10.1016/j.lfs.2003.03.005

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Li S: Network systems underlying traditional Chinese medicine syndrome and herb formula. Current Bioinformatics 2009, 4: 188–196. 10.2174/157489309789071129

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  24. Ma T, Tan C, Zhang H, Wang M, Ding W, Li S: Bridging the gap between traditional Chinese medicine and systems biology: the connection of Cold Syndrome and NEI network. Mol BioSyst 2010, 6: 613–619. 10.1039/b914024g

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  25. Brunner HG, van Driel MA: From syndrome families to functional genomics. Nat Rev Genet 2004, 5: 545–551. 10.1038/nrg1383

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  26. Wu X, Jiang R, Zhang MQ, Li S: Network-based global inference of human disease genes. Mol Syst Biol 2008, 4: 189. 10.1038/msb.2008.27

    Article  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  27. Zhao SW, Li S: Network-based relating pharmacological and genomic spaces for drug target identification. PLoS ONE 2010, 5: e11764. 10.1371/journal.pone.0011764

    Article  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  28. Li S, Zhang B, Zhang NB: Network target for screening synergistic drug combinations with application to traditional Chinese medicine. BMC Systems Biology 2010,:.

    Google Scholar 

  29. Li LS, Zhang NB, Li S: Ranking effects of candidate drugs on biological process by integrating network analysis and Gene Ontology. Chin Sci Bull 2010, 55: 2974–2980. 10.1007/s11434-010-4067-6

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

This work is supported by the NSFC (Nos. 30873464 and 60934004).

This article has been published as part of BMC Bioinformatics Volume 11 Supplement 11, 2010: Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Genome Informatics (GIW2010). The full contents of the supplement are available online at http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/11?issue=S11.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Shao Li.

Additional information

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

SL conceived and designed the experiments, analyzed the data and wrote manuscript. BZ participated in the cell experiments and writing manuscript. YW, DJ and NZ participated in the computational works and writing manuscript.

Rights and permissions

This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Li, S., Zhang, B., Jiang, D. et al. Herb network construction and co-module analysis for uncovering the combination rule of traditional Chinese herbal formulae. BMC Bioinformatics 11 (Suppl 11), S6 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-11-S11-S6

Download citation

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-11-S11-S6

Keywords