| Literature DB >> 34666554 |
Anna O Ermakova1,2, Fiona Dunbar1, James Rucker2, Matthew W Johnson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 5-Methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT) is a naturally occurring, short-acting psychedelic tryptamine, produced by a variety of plant and animal species. Plants containing 5-MeO-DMT have been used throughout history for ritual and spiritual purposes. The aim of this article is to review the available literature about 5-MeO-DMT and inform subsequent clinical development.Entities:
Keywords: 5-MeO-DMT; 5-methoxy-N; N-dimethyltryptamine; classic psychedelic; hallucinogen; tryptamine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34666554 PMCID: PMC8902691 DOI: 10.1177/02698811211050543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychopharmacol ISSN: 0269-8811 Impact factor: 4.153
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram.
Receptor binding profiles for 5-MeO-DMT.
| Binding sites | Binding affinity, Ki (nM) | Binding affinity, Ki (nM) | Binding affinity, Ki (nM)PDSP Ki database |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serotonin (5-HT) receptors | |||
| 5-HT1A | 1.9 | 3.0 | |
| 5-HT1B | 74 | 14 | 351 |
| 5-HT1D | 6.3 | 2.3 | |
| 5-HT1E | 360.2 | 376 | |
| 5-HT2A | 2011 | 907 | 14 |
| 390 | |||
| 207 | |||
| 600 | |||
| 616 | |||
| 617 | |||
| 620 | |||
| 5-HT2B | 3884 | 36 | 1300 |
| 5-HT2C | 538 | 418 | 87.1 |
| 100 | |||
| 5-HT5A | 276.6 | 505 | |
| 5-HT6 | 35.2 | 6.5 | |
| 5-HT7 | 3.9 | 4.5 | |
| Dopamine receptors | |||
| D1 | 79.5 | >10,000 | |
| D2 | 3562 | >10,000 | |
| D3 | 497.6 | >10,000 | |
| D4 | 3120 | >10,000 | |
| D5 | >10,000 | >10,000 | |
| Norepinephrine receptors | |||
| α1A | >10,000 | 4373 | |
| α1B | >10,000 | 2188 | |
| α2A | 1890 | 938 | |
| α2B | 2640 | 430 | |
| α2C | 508.1 | 206 | |
| β2 | >10,000 | 2679 | |
| Other receptors and transporters | |||
| σ-1 | >10,000 | >10,000 | |
| σ-2 | >10,000 | 3689 | |
| H1 | ND | 7580 | |
| Serotonin transporter protein (SERT) | 2032 | 3603 | |
| Dopamine active transporter (DAT) | >10,000 | >10,000 | |
| Norepinephrine transporter (NET) | 2859 | >10,000 | |
The raw Ki data is from Supplementary Table S2, Ray (2010) or Table 1, Halberstadt et al. (2012), both based on cloned human receptors in cell lines. 5-MeO-DMT also binds to the trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1), but the Ki is not provided (Wallach, 2009). 5-MeO-DMT bound to the following sites with Ki values >10,000 nM: 5-HT3, Ca2+ channels, β1, β3, DOR, MOR, KOR, EP3, EP4, GABAA, H2, H3, H4, M1, M2, M3, M4, M5 (Halberstadt, 2012). Additionally, we present older data, based on rat or pig brain homogenates, retrieved from PDSP Ki database (Roth et al., 2000) in January 2021 (https://pdsp.unc.edu/databases/kidb.php).
Figure 2.Metabolism of 5-MeO-DMT.
Doses and routes of administration in different species.
| Species | References | Threshold dose | Effective dose | High dose | LD50 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldfish |
| NA | 5 µg IC for a 1.5–3 g fish | NA | NA |
| Mouse | NA | 0.3–5 mg/kg IP, SC | >8 mg/kg IP, IV | 75–115 mg/kg IP | |
| Rat | <0.1 mg/kg IP, SC | 0.5–2 mg/kg IP, SC | >3 mg/kg IP | NA | |
| Gerbil |
| 0.5 mg/kg SC | NA | 8 mg/kg SC | NA |
| Guinea-pig | NA | 1–10 mg/kg SC | NA | NA | |
| Hamster |
| NA | 1–4 mg/kg IP | >5 mg/kg IP | NA |
| Rabbit |
| NA | 0.29 mg/kg | NA | NA |
| Cat | 0.025 mg/kg IM | 0.25–0.5 mg/kg IM | >1–5 mg/kg IM, IV, | 15 mg/kg IM | |
| Dog |
| NA | 0.1 mg/kg IV | NA | NA |
| Sheep | 0.02 mg/kg IV | 0.1–0.7 mg/kg IV | >1 mg/kg IV | 1–5 mg/kg IV | |
| Pig |
| NA | 0.5–1.8 mg/kg IV | NA | NA |
| Grivet monkey |
| NA | 0.45 mg/kg SC | NA | NA |
| Stumptail macaque monkey | 0.05 mg/kg IM | 0.1–0.25 mg/kg IM | NA | NA | |
| Rhesus monkey |
| >0.1 mg/kg IV | 0.25 mg/kg IV | 8–16 mg/kg IV | NA |
| Human | 1–2 mg S | 2–10 mg S | 10–20 mg S | NA |
IC: intracranial; IM: intramuscular; IN: intranasal; IP: intraperitoneal; IV: intravenous; MAOI: monoamine oxidase inhibitor; NA: information not available; O: oral; S: smoked or vapourised; SC: subcutaneous; SL: sublingual.
Minimal (or threshold) dose is defined as the dose after which any difference in behaviour or physiology compared to baseline is observed. Effective dose is defined in a similar way to ED50 and reliably produces hallucinogenic-like and other characteristic behavioural effects in animal models. High dose is the one leading to marked serotonin syndrome or other serious adverse effects. Note that these dose ranges are an approximation, depend on particular behaviour/task, and in some species based on only one or two studies and drug administrations. The species differences could be due to the pharmacokinetics and metabolism differences, as well as the physiology of the specific animal models. It is also likely that direct mg/kg comparison is not appropriate across species and interspecies scaling factor is necessary for the meaningful comparison.
Representative references, selecting studies containing multiple doses.
Behavioural effects of 5-MeO-DMT in different species.
| Species | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| Cotton boll weevil ( | Potent anti-feeding effect |
|
| Goldfish ( | Surfacing behaviour, which is a characteristic hallucinogen response in fish |
|
| Mouse | • Mice discriminate 5-MeO-DMT from saline | |
| Rat | • Rats discriminate 5-MeO-DMT from saline, but not from other classic psychedelics | |
| Mongolian gerbil ( | • Reciprocal forepaw treading, reciprocal hindleg body scratch, hindleg abduction, body tremors and Straub tail |
|
| Guinea-pig ( | • Dose-dependent increase in the locomotor activity of naïve, unhabituated guinea pigs. Interestingly, there results are opposite to what is commonly observed in rats, that is, decrease in locomotor activity |
|
| Syrian hamster ( | • At lower doses, the predominant effect was flat-body posture |
|
| Rabbit ( | • 5-MeO-DMT produced head bobs but not body shakes |
|
| Cat ( | • Limb flicking, abortive grooming (starting the motion as if to groom, and stopping it), head shaking, staring, investigatory and hallucinatory-like behaviours similar to those produced by other psychedelics, except for the faster onset and shorter duration in case of 5-MeO | |
| Sheep ( | • Low doses: urination, tail, ear and lip twitching, lip licking, head shaking, agitation, pupil dilation, mild hind limb paresis and mild ataxia | |
| Pig ( | • Grimacing, backward locomotion, blank stare, screams, head shakes, generalised tremor followed by lateral recumbency with muscle rigidity |
|
| Grivet monkey ( | • 5-MeO-DMT substitutes completely for LSD in drug discrimination studies | Nielsen et al. (1985) |
| Stumptail macaque monkey ( | • Acute effects: increased submissive gestures and hyperactivity, a reduction in social grooming and other social behaviour, an increase in distancing from other monkeys, and increase in checking, limb jerks, body shakes. Animals appear alert and restless | |
| Rhesus macaque monkey ( | • Medium doses: ataxia, decreased spontaneous movement and climbing, and unresponsiveness to salient external stimuli, slow nystagmoid movements and mydriasis, stringy salivation, jaw clenching, loss of motor coordination and diminished muscle tone |
|
LSD: lysergic acid diethylamide.
For rats and mice, representative references are presented.
Adverse effects of 5-MeO-DMT from human epidemiological studies and published ‘underground’ reports.
| Study | Acute adverse effects | Delayed adverse effects |
|---|---|---|
| Davis 2020 (retrospective survey) | Participants reported that psychedelic treatment they received (ibogaine plus 5-MeO-DMT) was one of the most psychologically challenging (69%) experiences of their entire lives | Not assessed |
| Not assessed | Not assessed | |
| Uthaug (2020b) (prospective study of synthetic 5-MeO-DMT in naturalistic settings) | 45.5% ( | On the 7-day follow-up, 27.3% ( |
| Uthaug (2020a) (retrospective survey) | Not assessed | ‘Reactivation’ or flashback experiences reported more common with vaporised route of administration compared to the intramuscular (3/14 vs 9/13 participants, respectively) |
| Uthaug (2019) (prospective study of toad secretions in naturalistic setting) | Not assessed | Not assessed |
| Davis 2019 (retrospective survey) | Assessed using CEQ: | Not assessed |
| Not assessed | Not assessed | |
| Physical purging through dry heaving that lasted for several minutes | Not assessed | |
| Assessed using CEQ: | Not assessed | |
| ‘Dissociative experiences’, involving losing consciousness and memory of the drug session, psychotic or fear-panic reactions occurred in about 10% of cases. Most dissipate as the drug wears off | Flashback/reactivation experience (of the dissociative, fear or psychotic reactions) | |
| Tinnitus | Not reported | |
| Nausea, tinnitus, fear, feeling like dying, blackout, purple face and no breathing (in one case with unknown but very large smoked dose) | Psychosis, terror, lack of sleep (one report) |
SD: standard deviation.