ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCECharacterized by inflammation of the gastric mucosa, atrophy of gastric gland cells, and intestinal metaplasia, Chronic Atrophic Gastritis (CAG) is a precancerous lesion disease. In traditional Chinese medicine, Rhizoma Coptidis (RC) is extensively used for treating gastrointestinal disorders, mainly because RC alkaloids-based extracts are the main active pharmaceutical ingredients. Total Rhizoma Coptidis extracts (TRCE) is a mixture of Rhizoma Coptidis extracts from Rhizoma Coptidis with alkaloids as the main components. However, the efficacy and mechanism of TRCE on CAG need further study.AIM OF THE STUDYTo explore the therapeutic effect and underlying mechanisms of action of TRCE on N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG)-induced chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) using network pharmacological analysis.MATERIALS AND METHODSThe amelioration effect of TRCE on CAG was evaluated in MNNG-induced CAG mice. The pathological severity of the mice was evaluated through H&E staining. Detection of gastric mucosal parietal cell loss was conducted using immunofluorescence staining, and serum indices were measured using ELISA. Additionally, the active compounds and drug targets of Rhizoma Coptidis were curated from the STP, SEA, and TCMSP databases, alongside disease targets of CAG sourced from PharmGkb, OMIM, and GeneCards databases. By mapping drug targets to disease targets, overlapping targets were identified. A shared protein-protein interaction (PPI) and drug target network were constructed for the overlapping targets and analyzed for KEGG enrichment.RESULTSThe results of animal experiments demonstrate that TRCE has the potential to improve the CAG process in mice. In conjunction with disease characteristics, cyberpharmacology analysis has identified nine core compounds, 151 targets, 10 core targets, and five significant inflammatory pathways within the compound-target-pathway network. Furthermore, there is a remarkable coincidence rate of 98% between the core compound targets of TRCE and the targets present in the CAG disease database. The accurate search and calculation of literature reports indicate that the coverage rate for 121 predicted core targets related to CAG reaches 81%. The primary characteristic of CAG lies in its inflammatory process. Both predicted and experimental findings confirm that TRCE can regulate ten key inflammation-associated targets (TP53, STAT3, AKT1, HSP90AA1, TNF, IL-6, MAPK3, SRC, JUN, and HSP90AA1) as well as inflammation-related pathways (MAPK, HIF-1, Toll-Like Receptor, IL-17, TNF, and other signaling pathways). These mechanisms mitigate inflammation and reduce gastric mucosal damage in CAG mice.CONCLUSIONSIn conclusion, TRCE was shown to alleviate CAG by modulating TP53, STAT3, AKT1, HSP90AA1, TNF, IL-6, MAPK3, SRC, JUN, and EGFR, as demonstrated by combined network pharmacology and biological experiments. In conclusion, our study provides a robust foundation for future clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of RC in treating CAG.