Description:
Various ways and treatment efforts are carried out to avoid the severe impact of COVID-19 cases, one of
which is using plants as natural immunomodulatory agents. One of the plants that is proven to act as a
natural immunomodulator is lemongrass (Cymbopogon citratus). This study aimed to determine the
protein tissue associated with the body's immune system activated by C. citratus. The secondary
metabolites of C. citratus were identified using the KNApSAck and Dr. Duke databases. Target proteins
associated with plant-secondary metabolite compounds from the SwissTargetPrediction database and
immunomodulatory-associated target proteins were obtained from the GeneCards database. The
intersected proteins were put into StringDB and analyzed using KEGG to obtain network pharmacology.
98 secondary metabolite compounds of C. citratus were obtained from the database. Proteins associated
with C. citratus contain 1096 compounds, and those related to immunomodulators contain 1380 proteins.
The intersection results obtained 244 proteins predicted to interact with C. citratus and are related to
immunomodulators. From the results of KEGG analysis, five pathways related to C. citratus were obtained,
namely PD-L1 expression and PD-1 checkpoint pathway in cancer, Fc epsilon RI signaling pathway, Th17
cell differentiation, T cell receptor signaling pathway, and IL-17 signaling pathway. MAPK 1, MAPK 3, and
MAPK 14 proteins are predicted to be in all five related pathways, and Mol 13 compounds are predicted
to be able to interact with these three proteins. Thus, it can be concluded that the compound Mol 13 is
the compound that plays the most role in acting as an immunomodulator in C. citratus.
URL:
http://103.158.96.210:88/web_repository/uploads/2471-133-4205-1-10-20231113.pdf
Type:
Procceding
Document:
Diploma III Farmasi
Date:
23-06-2024
Author:
Dominyda Vebrianto Saputro