Abstract
HIV/AIDS continues to pose a significant global public health concern, with Sub-Saharan Africa having the highest number of people living with HIV (PLHIV). Traditional medicines have been increasingly essential in treating and managing PLHIV. Product Nkabinde (PN), a polyherbal formulation derived from traditional medicinal plants, has recently demonstrated significant potential in the treatment of HIV. This study aims to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying the therapeutic effects of phytochemicals identified from PN in HIV treatment, utilizing network pharmacology and molecular docking. The intersecting (common) genes of the 27 phytochemicals of PN and HIV were computed on a Venn diagram, while the protein-protein interaction (PPI) network of the intersecting genes was plotted using STRING. The hub (10) genes were computed and analyzed for Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment pathways using ShinyGO. Molecular docking and protein-ligand interaction analysis of the 27 phytochemicals with each of the 10 hub genes were performed using the Maestro Schrodinger suite. The KEGG analysis reveals an important network with lower False Discovery Rate (FDR) values and higher fold enrichment. The pathway enrichments reveal that the 10 hub genes regulated by PN focus on immune regulation, metabolic modulation, viral comorbidity, carcinogenesis, and inflammation. GO analysis further reveals that PN plays key roles in transcription regulation, such as miRNA, responses to hormones and endogenous stimuli, oxidative stress regulation, and apoptotic signalling, kinase binding, protein kinase binding, transcription factor binding, and ubiquitin ligase binding enriched pathways. Consequently, molecular docking unveils complexes with higher binding energies, such as rutin-HSP90AA1 (-10.578), catechin-JUN (-9.512), quercetin-3-O-arabinoside-AKT1 (-9.874), rutin-EGFR (-8.127), aloin-ESR1 (-8.585), and quercetin-3-0-β-D-(6'-galloyl)-glucopyranoside-BCL2 (-7.021 kcal/mol). Overall, the results reveal pathways associated with HIV pathology and possible anti-HIV mechanisms of PN. Therefore, further in silico, in vitro, and in vivo validations are required to substantiate these findings.