| Literature DB >> 28424752 |
Brenda M Gannon1, William E Fantegrossi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years, commercial bath salts products containing synthetic cathinone analogues have emerged as illicit drugs of abuse. These cathinones are structurally similar to the psychostimulants 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and methamphetamine (METH), and produce their effects via interactions with monoamine transporters, where smaller compounds (e.g., mephedrone) are amphetamine-like monoamine releasers, while the structurally larger compounds (e.g., naphyrone) are cocaine-like monoamine reuptake inhibitors. Individual cathinones also differ from one another with respect to selectivity among the three monoamine transporters. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE OF STUDY: This study was designed to assess the cocaine-like interoceptive effects of synthetic cathinone analogues functioning as passive monoamine reuptake inhibitors (naphyrone) or as releasers (mephedrone) in mice in order to compare effectiveness (degree of substitution) and potency with positive control psychostimulants cocaine, METH, and MDMA. PROCEDURES: In the present study, mice were trained to discriminate 10 mg/kg cocaine from saline, and substitutions with METH, MDMA, mephedrone, naphyrone, and morphine were performed. MAINEntities:
Keywords: bath salts; cathinones; drug discrimination
Year: 2016 PMID: 28424752 PMCID: PMC5393345 DOI: 10.4303/jdar/236009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Alcohol Res ISSN: 2090-8342
Figure 1(Left panel) Discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine, mephedrone, naphyrone, MDMA, METH, and morphine in mice trained to discriminate 10 mg/kg cocaine from saline. Abscissa: SAL represents test injection of saline and TD represents administration of the cocaine training dose. Numbers refer to doses of drugs during substitution sessions, expressed as milligram per kilogram on a log scale. Ordinate: percent of total responses emitted on the cocaine-appropriate lever. (Right panel) Response rates following administration of saline, cocaine, mephedrone, naphyrone, MDMA, METH, or morphine during substitution sessions. The abscissa is as described above. Ordinate: response rates, expressed as lever presses per second. Asterisks adjacent to points indicate generalization at this dose. Errors bars depict means ±SEM. The “n = 4” designation indicates only four mice were included in the data point (responding was suppressed in one mouse at 10 mg/kg MDMA).
Structures, pharmacological class, mechanism, relative selectivity for monoamine transporters as inhibitors and substrates, and interpolated ED50 values for cocaine-like discriminative stimulus effects. Dashes indicate no pharmacologically-relevant effects for the given endpoint.
| Test compound | Structure | Drug class | Mechanism | Inhibition selectivity | Monoamine release | ED50 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Stimulant | Blocker | DAT ≈ NET ≈ SERT | — | 3.0 mg/kg (0.9, 5.2) | |
|
| Stimulant | Releaser | NET | DA | 0.4 mg/kg (0.3, 0.6) | |
|
| Stimulant | Releaser | NET ≈ SERT ≈ DAT | DA ≈ 5-HT | 2.6 mg/kg (0.8, 4.3) | |
|
| Stimulant | Releaser | NET | DA ≈ 5-HT | 1.5 mg/kg (1.1, 2.0) | |
|
| Stimulant | Blocker | NET ≈ DAT ≈ SERT | — | 3.2 mg/kg (1.3, 5.0) | |
|
| Opioid | — | — | — |