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Synthesis and Behavioral Evaluation of Novel Psychedelics as Potential Treatments for Pain and Mood Disorders

Serotonin 2A receptor (5-HT2aR) agonists and κ-opioid receptor (KOR) agonists have been demonstrated to be effective treatments for several central nervous system (CNS) disorders including depression, anxiety, addiction, and pain. In a recent clinical study, psilocybin (a classical hallucinogen) was shown to significantly decrease the symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Treatment Resistance Depression (TRD) in humans for up to six weeks after a single dose. Several KOR agonists have been shown to be effective treatments of chronic pain without the physical dependence risks of µ-opioid receptor agonists. Also, due to KOR’s involvement in a biological anti-reward system, agonists for this receptor possess anti-addiction properties as demonstrated by their ability to decrease the self-administration of drugs of abuse in multiple different animal species.

Despite the great therapeutic potential for both these classes of molecules, their hallucinogenic and disassociate effects have been a major roadblock in the approval new pharmaceuticals.This dissertation describes the synthesis and behavioral evaluation of known and novel 5-HT2aR and KOR agonists. In the first half, the synthesis of several molecules related to the structure of ibogaine are described and the novel “oxa-iboga” class is introduced. One of the molecules in this class, oxa-noribogaine, has been evaluated in a variety of in vivo mouse tests including tail-flick, open field, and forced swim test. The results demonstrate that oxa-noribogaine is a potent KOR agonist and analgesic but has a lower side-effect profile compared to other KOR agonists such as noribogaine, epi-oxa-noribogaine, and U50,488H.

In the second half, two emerging classes of antidepressants, NMDAR antagonists and 5-HT2aR agonists, are described. Molecules from both these classes cause rapid acting antidepressant effects that can be induced after a single dose. This is a sharp contrast to traditional antidepressants such as SSRIs which require 4-6 weeks of consistent use before therapeutic effects are achieved. In our lab, a set of substituted phenethylamines which act as 5-HT2aR agonists were evaluated in vivo in the head twitch assay, forced swim test, sucrose preference test, and fear extinction assays. Their hallucinogenic and antidepressant-like effects are reported. One molecule, 4-CT, was designed and synthesized based on the structure of Ariadne, a 5-HT2aR agonist with low or no psychedelics effects. 4-CT produced a decreased number of head twitches compared to DOI (a hallucinogenic research control) and showed possible antidepressant-like effects in the forced swim test.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:columbia.edu/oai:academiccommons.columbia.edu:10.7916/a09m-th95
Date January 2022
CreatorsBechand, Benjamin
Source SetsColumbia University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeTheses

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