TRANSCRIPTOMICS, CHEMINFORMATICS, AND SYSTEMS PHARMACOLOGY STRATEGIES UNVEIL THE POTENTIAL BIOACTIVES TO COMBAT COVID-19
Date
2022-09-13
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is a viral disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus and is
becoming a global threat again because of the higher transmission rate and lack of proper therapeutics
as well as the rapid mutations in the genetic pattern of SARS-CoV-2. Despite vaccinations, the
prevalence and recurrence of this infection are still on the rise, which urges the identification of
potential global therapeutics for a complete cure. Plant-based alternative medicine is becoming
popular worldwide because of its higher efficiency and minimal side effects. Yet, identifying the
potential medicinal plants and formulating a plant-based medicine is still a bottleneck. Hence,
in this study, the systems pharmacology, transcriptomics, and cheminformatics approaches were
employed to uncover the multi-targeted mechanisms and to screen the potential phytocompounds
from significant medicinal plants to treat COVID-19. These approaches have identified 30 unique
COVID-19 human immune genes targeted by the 25 phytocompounds present in four selected
ethnobotanical plants. Differential and co-expression profiling and pathway enrichment analyses
delineate the molecular signaling and immune functional regulations of the COVID-19 unique genes.
In addition, the credibility of these compounds was analyzed by the pharmacological features. The
current holistic finding is the first to explore whether the identified potential bioactives could reform
into a drug candidate to treat COVID-19. Furthermore, the molecular docking analysis was employed
to identify the important bioactive compounds; thus, an ultimately significant medicinal plant was
also determined. However, further laboratory evaluation and clinical validation are required to
determine the efficiency of a therapeutic formulation against COVID-19.
Description
Keywords
COVID-19, cheminformatics, molecular docking, phytocompounds, systems pharmacology