Crocin (Saffron Water-soluble Carotenoid · Antidepressant · Neuroprotective · AMD)
| Compound | Crocin (Crocetin di-β-gentiobioside) |
| Chemical class | Terpenoid — Carotenoid / Apocarotenoid (Water-soluble carotenoid diester glycoside) |
| CAS | 42553-65-1 |
| Primary source | Crocus sativus (saffron stigmas), Gardenia jasminoides (gardenia fruit) |
| Key applications | Neuroprotective; antidepressant; cognitive support; antioxidant; anti-ischaemic; product-live via Kashmiri Saffron |
| Claim strength | Moderate |
| Typical form | Saffron extract standardised to crocins 2–15%; crocin isolate; Kashmiri saffron dried stigmas |
| Buy from Herbuno |
Kashmiri Saffron (Kesar / Mongra) Dried Stigmas - Crocus sativus → Kashmiri Saffron (Half-cut) Dried Stigmas - Crocus sativus → |
Name origin: From krokos (Greek: saffron). Crocin is the primary colouring agent of saffron — responsible for saffron’s characteristic golden-yellow colour that has made it the most expensive spice by weight globally. Crocin is uniquely water-soluble among carotenoids — the carotenoid pigment crocetin (the apocarotenoid aglycone) is linked to two gentiobiose sugar units, making crocin soluble in water and conferring unusual pharmacokinetic properties relative to lipophilic carotenoids. Saffron additionally contains safranal (the volatile aroma compound) and picrocrocin (the bitter tasting component) — all three contributing to saffron’s unique organoleptic and pharmacological profile. Traditional use: Saffron (Crocus sativus) has been cultivated and used for over 3,500 years — one of the oldest documented botanical medicines, appearing in Ebers Papyrus (1550 BCE), used in Persian medicine (Avicenna’s Canon), Ayurveda (Kumkuma), and throughout Mediterranean and South Asian culinary and medical traditions. Traditional uses include antidepressant, aphrodisiac, digestive, and for menstrual regulation — applications validated by modern pharmacological research. Research trajectory: Saffron extract (standardised to crocins and safranal) has the most robust human clinical evidence among botanical antidepressants — multiple RCTs comparing saffron to fluoxetine and imipramine. Emerging evidence for cognitive protection, age-related macular degeneration, and PMS management. Commercial source: Kashmiri Saffron (Kesar) dried stigmas and Kashmiri saffron in multiple grades — is available from Herbuno; Kashmiri saffron from India’s Pampore region is among the highest-quality saffron globally.
Evidence for Crocin Applications
Antidepressant — clinical evidence (Moderate): A systematic review and meta-analysis (Hausenblas et al., 2013; updated 2019 with 23 RCTs) found saffron extract significantly superior to placebo and equivalent to standard antidepressants (fluoxetine, imipramine, citalopram) for mild-to-moderate depression. Effect sizes (Cohen’s d ~0.85–1.0) are comparable to pharmaceutical antidepressants. The mechanism involves serotonin reuptake inhibition (similar to SSRIs), NMDA antagonism, and anti-inflammatory neuroprotection via crocins and safranal. The evidence quality is moderate — most RCTs are Iranian with small samples, but the consistency across studies is notable. Claim strength: Moderate (consistent RCTs; small samples; growing independent replication).
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD): Crocin and crocetin have neuroprotective activity in retinal photoreceptors via antioxidant, anti-VEGF, and blood flow-improving mechanisms. Italian RCTs by Falsini et al. show saffron supplementation (20 mg/day saffron extract) significantly improves retinal function scores in early AMD patients over 3 months. The improvement was maintained with continued use. This is one of the most specific clinical applications for saffron in ophthalmology. Claim strength: Moderate (2 positive Italian RCTs; replication limited).
Cognitive support and neuroprotection: Multiple RCTs using 30 mg/day saffron extract in mild cognitive impairment and early Alzheimer’s show cognitive test improvements comparable to low-dose donepezil. Crocin protects neurons from amyloid-beta and glutamate-induced toxicity in cell models. The cognitive evidence is emerging but represents one of the most promising natural cognitive enhancement datasets. Claim strength: Moderate.
Kashmiri Saffron (Kesar / Mongra) Dried Stigmas - Crocus sativus →
Kashmiri Saffron (Half-cut) Dried Stigmas - Crocus sativus →
Browse Standardised Extract Powders →
Frequently Asked Questions — Crocin
Why is saffron so expensive and is there a substitute?
Saffron is produced exclusively from the hand-harvested stigmas of Crocus sativus flowers — each flower produces three stigmas, and it takes approximately 150,000 flowers (70–75 kg of fresh stigmas) to produce 1 kg of dried saffron. C. sativus is a sterile triploid that cannot reproduce from seed — it must be propagated from corms, limiting cultivation expansion speed. Labour-intensive hand-harvesting during a 3-week annual flowering window further restricts supply. No botanical substitute replicates saffron’s specific crocin + safranal + picrocrocin combination. Gardenia jasminoides (gardenia fruit) is a rich crocetin source and produces crocin — used commercially in Japan and China as a saffron colour substitute, but with different flavour and pharmacological profiles from saffron.
Is Kashmiri saffron better than Iranian saffron?
Both are among the highest-quality saffron origins globally. Kashmiri saffron (grown in the Pampore plateau, Kashmir valley, at 1,600 m altitude) is characterised by its deep red colour, high safranal content (the aroma compound), and distinctive aromatic profile attributed to the unique microclimate. ISO 3632 saffron grading classifies saffron by crocin, picrocrocin, and safranal content — both Kashmiri and high-grade Iranian saffron achieve Category I (highest grade). Some analytical studies suggest Kashmiri saffron has higher picrocrocin (bitterness) than Spanish saffron, indicating higher quality markers.
What dose of saffron is effective for depression?
RCTs showing antidepressant efficacy used 30 mg/day standardised saffron extract (equivalent to approximately 0.3–1 g dried saffron, depending on standardisation). Most trials used a specific Iranian-origin saffron extract standardised to 2% crocin + 0.12% safranal. For Kashmiri saffron dried stigmas, the equivalent dose of actual saffron threads is approximately 0.2–0.4 g/day — a meaningful but not extravagant culinary amount. The antidepressant effects typically begin at 4–6 weeks of consistent use, similar to conventional antidepressants.
Can crocin be taken with antidepressant medications?
Saffron’s serotonergic mechanism (serotonin reuptake inhibition) creates a theoretical serotonin syndrome risk when combined with SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, or other serotonergic drugs. While no clinical cases of serotonin syndrome from saffron + antidepressant have been published, the pharmacological interaction risk is real and formulators should include standard serotonin syndrome advisory language. Patients considering saffron supplementation alongside antidepressant medication should consult their prescriber.
Related compounds: Safranal, Astaxanthin, Fucoxanthin, Andrographolide
Claim-strength scale – High = multiple human RCTs; Moderate = limited trials or strong preclinical convergence; Emerging = early-stage lab or animal data.
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