The effect and pharmacology of Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction on Alzheimer’s disease
Original Article

The effect and pharmacology of Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction on Alzheimer’s disease

Qiubing Li1, Yi Hou2, Baosheng Zhao3, Yingfan Li4, Xinyu Zhang1, Rong Mei5, Shuo Wang1, Peng Wang1, Ying Liu1

1The Fourth Department of Healthcare, China-Japan Friendship Hospital, Beijing, China; 2College of Life Science and Technology, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing, China; 3Center of Research Experiment, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, China; 4West China School of Medicine, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China; 5Department of Medicine, China-Japan Friendship Hospital, Beijing, China

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: Q Li, Y Hou, B Zhao; (II) Administrative support: B Zhao, Y Li; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: X Zhang, R Mei, Y Li; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: B Zhao, Y Li, S Wang, P Wang; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: Q Li, Y Hou, B Zhao; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Qiubing Li, MD. The Fourth Department of Healthcare, China-Japan Friendship Hospital, No.47 of Wenxueguan Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100029, China. Email: qiubingli24@163.com.

Background: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has gradually increased as society has aged and is now a serious social problem. In the clinical treatment of AD, patients show improvement in cognitive function after treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine compound, Yizhi Sheng Hui (YZSH) decoction. This study systematically investigates the effect and pharmacology of the YZSH decoction on AD.

Methods: In this study, 24 SAMP8 AD model mice were randomly divided into three groups: an untreated control group, a group treated with the YZSH decoction, and a positive control group treated with donepezil hydrochloride. Eight SAMR1 mice were placed in the normal control group. A Morris water maze test and a step-down test were conducted at 8 and 13 weeks after continuous intragastric administration of the two drugs. After 13 weeks of administration, the hippocampal expression of Aβ1-42 and tau protein were measured.

Results: There was no change in the latent period duration and the number of platform crossings in each group after 8 weeks of administration, but after 13 weeks of administration, the latent period of the treatment group and the positive control group were significantly shorter than the untreated control group. Initially, the SAMP8 mice showed a lower spatial exploration ability than the SAMR1 mice. However, after 13 weeks of administration, the treatment group and the control group exhibited a better exploration ability. Compared with the SAMR1 mice, the on-stage evasion time and step-down errors significantly increased in the untreated group. Compared with the untreated group, mice in the treatment group and the positive control group showed a shorter latent period after 8 weeks of administration, and the on-stage evasion time for both groups was significantly reduced after 13 weeks of administration. The treatment group showed fewer instances of electric shock. Hippocampal expression of Aβ1-42 was high in the untreated group, was much lower in the positive control group, and no Aβ1-42 expression was observed in the treatment group.

Conclusions: The YZSH decoction improved the learning and memory of mice with AD, related to the inhibition of Aβ1-42 expression.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease (AD); Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction (YZSH decoction); SAMP8 mice; β-amyloid protein; tau protein


Submitted Aug 18, 2020. Accepted for publication Mar 31, 2021.

doi: 10.21037/apm-20-1629


Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive and irreversible brain deterioration disease. AD is characterized by brain atrophy and the subsequent decreased cognitive ability of patients. This eventually leads to the inability of patients with AD to perform activities of daily living, accompanied by psychiatric symptoms. More than half of all known dementia cases may be induced by AD. A diagnosis of AD also causes enormous emotional and economic problems to the families of patients. In the past few decades, the incidence of AD has gradually increased as society has aged, and it effects up to 50% of people 85 years of age or older (1,2). This makes AD a serious social problem. Therefore, the prevention and treatment of AD are of great social significance.

The pathogenesis of AD is still unclear, but the major pathological features of AD are known: the senile plaques of aggregated β-amyloid protein (Aβ) and the accumulation of neurofibrillary tangles of hyperphosphorylated tau protein. Current studies on the pathogenesis of AD focus on the following aspects: (I) the synaptic dysfunction caused by the imbalance between the excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitter system; (II) the Aβ toxicity hypothesis; (III) the tau protein hypothesis; (IV) inflammation; and (V) vascular factors (3-8). Aβ is one of the most studied molecules in the pathogenesis of AD and results suggest that changes in Aβ metabolism (such as an increased Aβ production and decreased Aβ degradation) cause increased Aβ accumulation. Subsequently, oligomerization of Aβ will impact the synaptic and/or neuronal function by inducing inflammation and formation of amyloid plaques. These brain tissue injuries are irreversible, so brain function will gradually deteriorate.

Currently, there are no effective therapies for AD. The medicines approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for clinical therapy are acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and glutamate receptor antagonists. After long periods of clinical application, these drugs demonstrate some symptom improvement but do not effectively control the disease progression.

Therapies based on the Aβ toxicity hypothesis and the tau protein hypothesis, such as inhibiting the expression and aggregation of Aβ, facilitating the clearance of Aβ, Aβ-targeting triggered immunotherapy, inhibiting phosphorylation of tau protein, etc., have recently become the focus of anti-AD studies (9). In addition, treatment of AD with Chinese medicine has a multi-target mechanism and has demonstrated a positive outcome (10). A single Chinese herb (e.g., ginseng, tuckahoe, rehmannia, dogwood, Polygala tenuifolia Willd, and Acorus gramineus) may inhibit the expression and aggregation of Aβ, the phosphorylation of tau protein, regulate neurotransmitters, reduce inflammation, and eliminate free radicals. In clinical research, therapies based on compound traditional Chinese medicine may enhance the cognitive performance of patients with AD and improve the quality of their life through invigorating the spleen and kidney, removing phlegm, and promoting blood circulation (11-17).

In this group’s clinical treatment of AD, patients with AD showed some improvement in cognitive function after treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine compound, Yizhi Sheng Hui (YZSH) decoction. Its effects include coordinating the heart and the kidney. In order to further investigate the mechanism of YZSH, SAMP8 mice (AD model animals) are treated with the YZSH decoction, after which their learning and memory abilities are evaluated through a Morris water maze test and a step-down test. The pharmacologic action is studied through ex vivo immunohistochemical analysis. The following article is presented in accordance with the Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments checklist (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-20-1629).


Methods

Materials

Laboratory animals and grouping

The animals used in this study included 24 male SAMP8 mice of the Alzheimer’s Dementia model (weight: 18–22 g) and 8 male SAMR1 mice (weight: 18–22 g). The animals were provided by the experimental animal laboratory of the Peking University Medical Department. The mice were fed with a standard chow diet and housed at room temperature of 22±2 °C. The SAMP8 mice were randomly divided into a model group, a decoction treatment group, and a positive control group treated with donepezil hydrochloride, by weight. There were eight mice in each group. The SAMR1 mice were used as the normal control group. All Animal experiments were performed under a project license (No. LA2019083) granted by the Peking University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines for the care and use of animals were followed.

Equipment

The Morris water maze, the step-down platform, and the video analysis system were manufactured by Mobile Datum in Shanghai.

Study methods

Administration of the Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction and donepezil hydrochloride

All groups were fed via intragastric administration. The normal control group and the model group were continuously fed water for 13 weeks. The mice in the treatment group were fed a YZSH decoction made of red ginseng, tuckahoe, prepared rehmannia root, platycladi seed, Polygala tenuifolia willd, Semen sinapis, etc. (one dose decocted for 100 mL, 15 mL/kg/d). The positive control group was fed a donepezil hydrochloride solution (1 mg/kg/d) once per day continuously for 13 weeks, and the behavioral experiments were conducted 8 weeks and 13 weeks after administration.

Morris water maze test

The Morris water maze test is a classic behavioral neuroscience method that characterizes the abilities of small animals in spatial orientation and memory. The Morris water maze utilized in this study was composed of a cylindrical metal water pool (60 cm in height and 120 cm in diameter), an automatic display, a surveillance device, a recording instrument, and a safety “island” (a 10 cm diameter platform). Clear water was poured into the pool until the water level was 1 cm above the platform. The water temperature was maintained at 23±2 °C. At the edges of the pool, at equal distances, four marker points were placed to divide the pool into four quadrants. The platform was placed in the second quadrant.

Navigation test

Each animal was trained once per day for a period of 3 days. During training, the animal was placed into the pool, facing the wall. At the same time, a recording device was initiated so the latent period of the mouse searching for the platform was automatically recorded by the computer. If the mouse could not find the platform in one minute after entering the pool, the researcher guided it to the platform and set it on top for 30 s, so it learned the pattern. On the fourth day, the mouse was placed in the pool (in the same location) to record its latent period of evasion. If the mouse could not find the platform in one minute, the latent period was recorded as 60 s. After each training, the mouse was dried to prevent any stress response from low body temperature.

Spatial exploration test

On the fifth day, the platform in the second quadrant was removed. In the same location, the mouse was placed into the pool, facing the wall. The number of times the mouse crossed the pool in 60 s was recorded. The mouse’s activities were captured by a fixed camera above the pool, and the recorded images were analyzed by EthoVision 3.0 software.

Step-down test

The mouse was placed in the apparatus for 2 min to adapt to the environment. The mouse was then subjected to an electric shock (by 0.7 mA ac current) so it would search for the platform to avoid the shock. The time it took for each mouse to jump onto the platform once subjected to the electric shock was recorded (evasion time) as the learning score. The mouse was tested again after 24 h. For the test, the mouse was placed on the platform first, and for 3 min its errors were recorded to reflect its memory retention.

Statistical analysis

The data was analyzed through a chi-square (χ2) test.

Aβ1-42 and tau protein expression in brain tissues

The expression of Aβ1-42 and tau protein in the hippocampus of the mice was measured by immunohistochemistry. The brain tissue was harvested and fixed in 10% formalin for three days. After it was embedded with paraffin, the fixed tissue was sliced into sections. The sections were then deparaffinized and hydrated. High-pressure antigen retrieval was performed using a citrate buffer (pH =6.0). The sections were treated with 3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol for 15 min to quench the endogenous peroxidase, followed by an incubation with normal serum to block any non-specific staining. Rabbit anti-Aβ1-42 or rabbit anti-tau was used to incubate the sections overnight at 4 °C. After washing, the tissue sections were treated with the biotinylated anti-rabbit secondary antibody, followed by additional incubation with the streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase complex. After staining with the diaminobenzidine kit, the sections were counterstained with hematoxylin. A negative control was treated simultaneously with the same procedure, but phosphate-buffered saline was used instead of the primary antibody.

Tumor tissue expression levels of Aβ1-42 and tau protein were further determined quantificationally through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).


Results

Effects of the Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction on spatial differentiation ability, learning ability, and memory of the SAMP8 mice

After 8 weeks of administration, the Morris water maze test results showed that the latent period for each group decreased during the four-day training (Table S1). There was almost no difference in the latent period for the SAMP8 mice treated with different agents, all of which were much longer than that of the SAMR1 control group (shown in the upper layer in Figure 1). The number of platform crossings for the untreated and donepezil hydrochloride treated SAMP8 mice were close to 0, while it was 0.21 for the group treated with the YZSH decoction (Table 1). These results suggest that the YZSH decoction improves the spatial searching capacity of mice with AD. These results show no noteworthy improvement in the learning ability and memory of the mice. In particular, the treatment with different drugs did not have noticeable effects after 8 weeks of treatment (P>0.05).

Figure 1 Latent periods after 8-week and 13-week administration during the navigation experiment of the SAMR1 group, the untreated group, the donepezil hydrochloride treated group, and the YZSH decoction treated group (x¯±s, n=8). Red column: after 8-week treatment. Blue column: after 13-week treatment. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 vs. SAMR1; P<0.05 vs. untreated group.
Table 1
Table 1 Effects of the YZSH decoction on the spatial searching capacity of the SAMP8 mice (x¯±s, n=8)
Full table

The Morris water maze test was performed again after 13 weeks of drug administration. As is illustrated in Table S2, as the number of training times increased, the latent period time decreased in the navigation test for the SAMP8 mice treated with donepezil hydrochloride and the YZSH decoction. The training times finally reached the level of the SAMR1 control group whereas the latent period only varied slightly for the untreated group (the bottom layer in Figure 1). The latent period for the mice treated with the YZSH decoction was 33.56 s. This was close to that of the SAMR1 control mice after two days of training (31.50 s). The mice treated with donepezil hydrochloride showed longer latent periods (46.03 s). These results suggest that the YZSH decoction exhibited a stronger effect than donepezil hydrochloride.

In the subsequent spatial exploration test, the spatial searching ability of the treated mice also improved after the 13-week administration. As is illustrated in Table 1, the number of platform crossings were 1.33 and 1.46 for the mice treated with donepezil hydrochloride and YZSH decoction, respectively (P>0.05). This reached the level of the control group (the SAMR1 mice), whereas the untreated mice showed no advances. These results suggest that the medicine variably improves the spatial searching ability of the model mice with AD.

Effects of the Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction on the passive conditioned evasion reflex of the SAMP8 mice

The step-down test (based on the active habits of mice) was performed to determine the passive evasion conditioned reflex. The therapeutic effect was observed in the step-down test after 8 weeks of administration, unlike the Morris water maze test (Table 2). The evasion time on-stage (Figure 2) and the step-down error times for both treated groups were reduced to the level of healthy SAMR1 mice, while the untreated mice showed a longer on-stage evasion time and had increased instances of step-down errors. These results indicate that the YZSH decoction effectively remits cognitive decline.

Table 2
Table 2 Number of errors in the step-down test after 8-week and 13-week administration (x¯±s, n=8)
Full table
Figure 2 Evasion time after 8-week and 13-week administration during the step-down test of the SAMR1 group, the untreated group, the donepezil hydrochloride treated group, and the YZSH decoction treated group (x¯±s, n=8). Red column: after 8-week treatment. Blue column: after 13-week treatment. **P<0.01 vs. SAMR1; P<0.05, ▲▲P<0.01 vs. untreated group.

Aβ1-42 and tau protein expression in the brain tissues of SAMP8 mice

To understand the pharmacology of the YZSH decoction, histological studies of the brain were conducted. The results in the upper panel in Figure 3A clearly demonstrate that there was a high expression of Aβ1-42 in the hippocampi of the untreated SAMP8 mice while there was no expression in the hippocampi of the SAMP8 mice treated with the YZSH decoction and donepezil hydrochloride. The staining assays (shown in the lower panel in Figure 3A) exhibited no tau protein expression in all groups.

Figure 3 The effect of the YZSH decoction on Aβ1-42 and tau protein expression in the brain tissues of the SAMP8 mice. Immunohistochemical staining images of Aβ1-42 and tau protein in the hippocampus, and the scale bar corresponds to 100 μm (A); quantified expression level of Aβ1-42 (B) and tau protein (C) obtained through ELISA.

The expression levels of Aβ1-42 and tau protein in the brains of the mice were determined quantitatively via the ELISA method. As is shown in Figure 3B and 3C, the expression of Aβ1-42 in the SAMP8 mice treated with the YZSH decoction and donepezil hydrochloride was down-regulated by approximately 25% (very close to the SAMR1 control group) while the expressions of tau protein varied only slightly for all the groups. These results suggest that the YZSH decoction relieves AD symptoms by adjusting the expression of Aβ1-42.


Discussion

In traditional Chinese medicine theory, the cognitive hypofunction and psychological behavioral symptoms of patients with AD are attributed to the abnormity of the mind that is related to the breakdown of the normal physiological coordination between the heart and the kidney. Traditional Chinese medical literature states that dementia can be treated by restoring the normal coordination between the heart and the kidney. In this study, the YZSH decoction (proven to possess an effect on repairing and coordinating heart and kidney functions) exhibited an obvious therapeutic effect on improving the cognitive function and the behavioral symptoms of patients with AD. In addition, the mechanism was explored to promote the use of the YZSH decoction in the clinical treatment of AD.

Senescence accelerated mice (SAM) display the typical characteristics of a short lifespan, an accelerated aging process, and pathological aging changes. In addition to these general aging symptoms, SAMP8 mice possess an age-related decline in learning ability and memory. Protein grains have been found in the brains of SAMP8 mice that are similar to senile plaques (18,19). In this study, the YZSH decoction significantly reduced the latent period of evasion for SAMP8 mice in the water maze and improved their spatial searching capacity (i.e., reduced the step-down evasion period and error times). These results indicate that the YZSH decoction improves the learning ability and memory of SAMP8 mice.

Combined with the pathologic results of the low expression of Aβ1-42 in the hippocampus of the SAMP8 mice treated with the YZSH decoction compared to the untreated and control groups, the decoction likely improved the learning and memory of the SAMP8 mice by inhibiting Aβ protein expression and reducing neuron injury. Although AD pathogenesis remains unclear, senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles have been confirmed as its classical pathological features. Previously published works have indicated that senile plaques form from the abnormal aggregation of Aβ proteins (20,21) and neurofibrillary tangles are mainly composed of hyperphosphorylated tau proteins (21,22). Current clinical medicines, based on the neuron protection hypothesis, exhibit unsatisfying therapeutic effects. Therefore, understanding the role of Aβ proteins and tau proteins in AD pathogenesis and therapy has become the focus of AD research. In the most recent AD diagnostic standards, including those of the International Working Group and the National Institute of Aging and Alzheimer’s Association, Aβ and tau proteins are treated as biomarkers in the diagnosis of AD (23,24). Currently, medical research based on the Aβ hypothesis and the tau hypothesis on reducing Aβ synthesis, inhibiting Aβ aggregation, promoting Aβ clearance, and inhibiting the hyperphosphorylation and aggregation of tau proteins have become important fields for the prevention and therapy of AD. Traditional Chinese medicine may provide new approaches to the multi-target and multi-mechanism perspectives for AD prevention and treatment (11,25,26).

The decoction’s inhibitory mechanism on the expression of Aβ1-42 (either by inhibiting Aβ synthesis/aggregation or by promoting its clearance) must be studied in the future. In this study, the expression of tau protein in the SAMP8 mice in all groups was nearly unchanged, and they were all close to that of the SAMR1 control group. This phenomenon was inconsistent with reference reports (27) so it should be investigated further to more clearly understand the mechanism(s) of AD.


Conclusions

The YZSH decoction improved the learning and memory of the SAMP8 mice, and it noticeably reduced the expression of Aβ1-42. Therefore, the YZSH decoction improved the learning and memory of the mice with AD by inhibiting the formation of Aβ1-42 in the hippocampus.


Acknowledgments

Funding: The authors thank the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) (No. 81471726, No. 81671754) for financial support.


Footnote

Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the ARRIVE reporting checklist. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-20-1629

Data Sharing Statement: Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-20-1629

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/apm-20-1629). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. All Animal experiments were performed under a project license (No. LA2019083) granted by the Peking University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines for the care and use of animals were followed.

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.


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Cite this article as: Li Q, Hou Y, Zhao B, Li Y, Zhang X, Mei R, Wang S, Wang P, Liu Y. The effect and pharmacology of Yizhi Sheng Hui decoction on Alzheimer’s disease. Ann Palliat Med 2021;10(5):5244-5251. doi: 10.21037/apm-20-1629

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