Geniposide and its iridoid analogs exhibit antinociception by acting at the spinal GLP-1 receptors.
Neuropharmacology · 2014
Last updated 2026-05-28The study found that geniposide, a compound derived from gardenia fruit, and its related compounds reduced pain in rats by acting on spinal GLP-1 receptors. When given by injection or mouth, geniposide blocked pain responses with maximum effects of 72% and 68%, respectively, and did not cause tolerance over seven days. The pain relief was prevented when spinal GLP-1 receptors were blocked or inhibited.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Neuropharmacology, 2014 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 63 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.42 |
| NIH percentile | 79 |
| Molecules | — |
Abstract
We recently discovered that the activation of the spinal glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors (GLP-1Rs) by the peptidic agonist exenatide produced antinociception in chronic pain. We suggested that the spinal GLP-1Rs are a potential target molecule for the management of chronic pain. This study evaluated the antinociceptive activities of geniposide, a presumed small molecule GLP-1R agonist. Geniposide produced concentration-dependent, complete protection against hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative damage in PC12 and HEK293 cells expressing rat and human GLP-1Rs, but not in HEK293T cells that do not express GLP-1Rs. The orthosteric GLP-1R antagonist exendin(9-39) right-shifted the concentration-response curve of geniposide without changing the maximal protection, with identical pA2 values in both cell lines. Subcutaneous and oral geniposide dose-dependently blocked the formalin-induced tonic response but not the acute flinching response. Subcutaneous and oral geniposide had maximum inhibition of 72% and 68%, and ED50s of 13.1 and 52.7 mg/kg, respectively. Seven days of multidaily subcutaneous geniposide and exenatide injections did not induce antinociceptive tolerance. Intrathecal geniposide induced dose-dependent antinociception, which was completely prevented by spinal exendin(9-39), siRNA/GLP-1R and cyclic AMP/PKA pathway inhibitors. The geniposide iridoid analogs geniposidic acid, genipin methyl ether, 1,10-anhydrogenipin, loganin and catalpol effectively inhibited hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative damage and formalin pain in an exendin(9-39)-reversible manner. Our results suggest that geniposide and its iridoid analogs produce antinociception during persistent pain by activating the spinal GLP-1Rs and that the iridoids represented by geniposide are orthosteric agonists of GLP-1Rs that function similarly in humans and rats and presumably act at the same binding site as exendin(9-39).
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24747181 ↗