A Synthetic Cannabinoid JWH-210 Reduces Lymphoid Organ Weights And T-cell Activator Levels In Mice Via CB2 Receptors
A 30-min period, beginning when maximal depression of locomotor activity first appeared as a function of dose, was used for analysis of dose-response data and calculation of ED50 values. During test sessions, both levers were active, such that ten consecutive responses on either lever led to 4F ADB reinforcement. The substitution tests occurred only if the rats had achieved 85% injection-appropriate responding on the two prior training sessions.
The locomotor activity assay was used to identify approximate time courses and dose ranges of psychoactive effects, which is useful for identifying parameters for drug discrimination experiments and are also predictive of the time course of the psychoactive effects in human users. The purpose of the present study was to assess the abuse liability of 5F-MDMB-PINACA, MDMB-CHIMICA, MDMB-FUBINACA, ADB-FUBINACA, and AMB-FUBINACA. Since there is currently no robust measure of the reinforcing/rewarding effects of cannabinoids, drug discrimination is currently the best model for assessing abuse liability of cannabinoids. The findings produce an apparent paradox, since CPP and self-administration predict with high reliability the likelihood that a compound will be abused by humans, and cannabinoids are well-known to produce active drug-seeking in human
Some mice showed abnormal behaviors (catalepsy, loss of traction, convulsion) right after the administration of the tested substances. The locomotor activity of the mice was measured 30 min and 2 hrs after the last substance administration. We also examined their neurotoxicity using brain samples through histopathological diagnose, especially in the nucleus accumbens core region. In histopathological analysis, neural cells of the animals treated with the high dose (5 mg/kg) of JWH-081 or JWH-210 showed distorted nuclei and nucleus membranes in the core shell of nucleus accumbens, suggesting neurotoxicity.
Table of Conten
After the incubation, mixture was centrifuged (18,000 x g, 20 °C) for 5 min and 0.5 μL of the supernatant was directly injected to the chromatographic system. In the next step, ammonium formate as salting agent was added to the mixture and incubated in a thermomixer (20 °C, 1200 rpm) for 15 min. After vortex-mixing, the mixture was allowed to stand 4F ADB at room temperature for 5 min. MS/MS experiments were performed in MRM (multiple reaction monitoring) mode with an isolation window of 0.4 m/z. The MS measurement was performed in positive ion mode (except for some acidic compounds such as barbiturates
Product ions detected at m/z 302, 217, and 145 (B2) confirmed that tert-leucine and indazole moieties remained unchanged, leading to the structure elucidation of a hydroxy-functional group at the 4-position of the butyl side chain by oxidative defluorination. The product ion m/z 336 (loss of methyl ester moiety) further confirmed the presence of dihydroxylated metabolites. The precursor ion, m/z 364 (B14, B5/B6) had a loss of 2 Da from m/z 366 indicated further dehydrogenation of the ester hydrolysis plus monohydroxylated metabolites. The presence of the product ion m/z 320, likely formed from a loss of carbon dioxide, indicated monohydroxylation at the tert-leucine in B8 (m/z 219), butyl side chain in B9 (m/z 145) and indazole moiety in B13 (m/z 161). The precursor ion, m/z 350 showed a loss of 14 Da explaining the hydrolysis of methyl ester from 4F-MDMB-BINACA.
Fig. 2.
The precursor ion m/z 396 (B10, B12/B15) was 32 Da higher than the parent drug, 4F-MDMB-BINACA, suggesting the addition of two hydroxy groups. All the below explanations for transformations into metabolites are based on the data shown in Fig. Metabolites were identified according to their precursor ions, product ions, and fragmentation patterns (Fig. 1). Traditional in-vivo metabolism studies to generate human metabolites of drugs relied heavily on the use of whole animal model systems, which are expensive, limited by drug administration amount, influenced by species variation and faced by many ethical issues. Eight in-vivo metabolites tentatively identified were mainly products of ester hydrolysis with or without additional dehydrogenation, N-dealkylation, monohydroxylation and oxidative defluorination with further oxidation to butanoic acid.
Fig. 1.
This outcome was anticipated since CES-mediated hydrolysis is commonly 4F ADB reported as the major metabolic pathway among the SCBs impacting the terminal ester group . Glucosides and sulfate metabolites have been reported with other SCBs where C. From these three samples, sample 2 contained only an ester hydrolysis metabolite (m/z 350). Both ester hydrolysis followed by oxidative defluorination to butanoic acid (B4, m/z 362) and monohydroxylation at tert-leucine moiety (B8, m/z 366) metabolites were found in 16/20 urine samples (Table 2). A In-vitro metabolites observed in common among respective seven most abundant metabolites in b C. The product ion detected at m/z 235, indicating loss of sulfate, confirmed the identity of the sulfation metabolite.
Fungus C. elegans
Concentrations of 4F-MDMB-BINACA in the postmortem blood samples were 2.50 and 2.34 ng/mL, which are in line with published data. Although the lethal dose of 4F-MDMB-BINACA is unknown, its concentration in postmortem blood samples was found to range between 0.10 and 2.90 ng/mL . In SCRA-related cases in which the deceased suffered from heart disease, the SCRA concentration in the postmortem blood was less than 1 ng/mL . Concentrations of SCRAs in postmortem cases cover a wide range ; however, some reports of survival have also been published—even at relatively high blood SCRA concentrations [19, 20