Groenlandicine (Protoberberine Alkaloid · Antimicrobial · Goldenseal Minor Alkaloid)
| Compound | Groenlandicine |
| Chemical class | Alkaloid — Isoquinoline (Protoberberine) |
| CAS | 6873-09-2 |
| Primary source | Hydrastis canadensis (goldenseal), Coptis spp. |
| Key applications | Antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, goldenseal alkaloid complex constituent |
| Claim strength | Emerging |
| Typical form | Goldenseal extract minor co-alkaloid |
| Buy from Herbuno |
Goldenseal Liquid Extract (Water Soluble) - Hydrastis canadensis → Goldenseal Oil Soluble Extract - Hydrastis canadensis → |
Commercial source: Groenlandicine is commercially available as a minor co-constituent of Hydrastis canadensis (goldenseal) rhizome extract, alongside berberine and canadine as the dominant alkaloids. Isolated groenlandicine is available as a research-grade material from specialist chemical suppliers. See sourcing options below. Traditional use: As a constituent of goldenseal, groenlandicine participates in that plant’s traditional use for mucous membrane infections, digestive complaints, and as a “golden seal” on wounds. It is one of the least abundant and least studied alkaloids in the goldenseal alkaloid complex. Research trajectory: Groenlandicine has a very limited research profile, primarily limited to antimicrobial activity screening where it contributes to goldenseal’s overall antibacterial spectrum. Structure-activity studies within the protoberberine class have characterised its receptor interactions relative to berberine, but dedicated pharmacological research is sparse. See sourcing options below.
Evidence for Groenlandicine Applications
Antimicrobial activity: Groenlandicine demonstrates antibacterial activity against common pathogens consistent with the protoberberine pharmacological class (DNA gyrase inhibition, membrane disruption). Its potency relative to berberine is lower in most assay systems. Contributes as a minor active within the goldenseal alkaloid complex. Claim strength: Emerging.
Anti-inflammatory: Limited cell model data demonstrate NF-κB inhibitory activity consistent with the protoberberine scaffold. No dedicated in vivo anti-inflammatory studies for isolated groenlandicine have been published. Claim strength: Emerging.
Goldenseal Liquid Extract (Water Soluble) - Hydrastis canadensis →
Goldenseal Oil Soluble Extract - Hydrastis canadensis →
Browse Standardised Extract Powders →
Dosage & Formulator Specification
Groenlandicine is present at very low concentrations in goldenseal extract (<1% of total alkaloids). At standard goldenseal doses (250–500 mg/day extract), co-delivered groenlandicine is pharmacologically minor (<5 mg). No isolated formulation or standalone supplement dose has been established. Groenlandicine is best understood as a minor authenticity marker of genuine goldenseal alkaloid complex rather than a primary pharmacological active.
Frequently Asked Questions — Groenlandicine
Is groenlandicine useful as a goldenseal authenticity marker?
Yes — groenlandicine is a characteristic minor alkaloid of Hydrastis canadensis that contributes to the botanical fingerprint of authentic goldenseal. Its presence alongside berberine and canadine at defined ratios in HPLC alkaloid profile analysis is supportive evidence for botanical identity. However, its very low abundance makes it less reliable as a standalone authenticity marker than the dominant alkaloid ratios.
Why is groenlandicine so poorly researched?
Its very low natural abundance in goldenseal and other protoberberine-containing plants makes isolation for dedicated pharmacological study costly and low-priority compared to the dominant alkaloids. The existing berberine literature covers the pharmacological class mechanisms comprehensively, leaving minimal research incentive for characterising minor structural analogues at the expense of more tractable research questions.
Should goldenseal extract be specified to include groenlandicine?
No — standard goldenseal extract specifications focus on berberine and total alkaloid content. Groenlandicine is a minor constituent that, if present at expected trace levels, confirms authentic goldenseal source without needing specific quantification in routine sourcing specifications. Request full alkaloid profile CoA only for specialised research applications.
Is groenlandicine related to canadine (l-tetrahydroberberine)?
Both are protoberberine alkaloids found in goldenseal, but they are not directly structurally related beyond the shared tetracyclic isoquinoline scaffold. Canadine is the tetrahydro-reduced form of berberine (fully saturated). Groenlandicine is a quaternary protoberberine (aromatic, like berberine) with different methoxy substitution pattern. They represent different structural subclasses within the goldenseal alkaloid complex.
Claim-strength scale – High = multiple human RCTs; Moderate = limited trials or strong preclinical convergence; Emerging = early-stage lab or animal data.
← HerbIQ Compound Index · HerbIQ P02: Extraction · HerbIQ P03: Delivery