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Activation of spinal glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors specifically suppresses pain hypersensitivity.

J Neurosci · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

In 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.

JournalJ Neurosci, 2014
Citations122
Relative citation ratio4.64
NIH percentile91
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 ↗