Activation of spinal glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors specifically suppresses pain hypersensitivity.
J Neurosci · 2014
Last updated 2026-05-28In experiments on rats and mice, spinal cord receptors for GLP-1 were found to be located on immune cells and increased after nerve injury. Injecting GLP-1 or the GLP-1 drug exenatide into the spine reduced pain hypersensitivity by 60–90% in several pain models, without changing normal pain responses.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Neurosci, 2014 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 122 |
| Relative citation ratio | 4.64 |
| NIH percentile | 91 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
This study aims to identify the inhibitory role of the spinal glucagon like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) signaling in pain hypersensitivity and its mechanism of action in rats and mice. First, GLP-1Rs were identified to be specifically expressed on microglial cells in the spinal dorsal horn, and profoundly upregulated after peripheral nerve injury. In addition, intrathecal GLP-1R agonists GLP-1(7-36) and exenatide potently alleviated formalin-, peripheral nerve injury-, bone cancer-, and diabetes-induced hypersensitivity states by 60-90%, without affecting acute nociceptive responses. The antihypersensitive effects of exenatide and GLP-1 were completely prevented by GLP-1R antagonism and GLP-1R gene knockdown. Furthermore, exenatide evoked β-endorphin release from both the spinal cord and cultured microglia. Exenatide antiallodynia was completely prevented by the microglial inhibitor minocycline, β-endorphin antiserum, and opioid receptor antagonist naloxone. Our results illustrate a novel spinal dorsal horn microglial GLP-1R/β-endorphin inhibitory pathway in a variety of pain hypersensitivity states.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24719110 ↗