Translational psychiatry
January 29, 2026
Rafael V Lima Da Cruz, Rêmullo B G de Miranda Costa, Gabriel M De Queiroz et al.
2 citations
A single dose of the psychedelic DMT reversed depression-like behavior and restored cognitive performance in male mice exposed to chronic stress, outperforming chronic fluoxetine across most measures. When given during the stress period, DMT reduced anhedonia but did not rescue cognitive deficits, indicating domain-specific long-lasting effects. All DMT regimens increased the integration of adult-born granule cells and reduced abnormally integrated cells in the brain, suggesting structural circuit repair. The role of the psychedelic experience remains uncertain because isoflurane anesthesia may have confounded results.
Journal of Neurochemistry
January 29, 2026
Paola Andrea Caro Aponte, Edison Huertas Montoya, Ítalo Odone Mazali et al.
A combinatorial therapy combining surgical root reimplantation, a fibrin sealant biopolymer, and a low dose of dimethyltryptamine (DMT) extracted from Mimosa tenuiflora roots rescued motor neurons and reduced glial reactivity in a rat model of ventral root avulsion. Proximal axotomy caused 78% motor neuron loss, glial reactivity, and synaptic detachment. Daily DMT at 1 mg/kg for two weeks significantly increased motor neuron survival, reduced glial reactivity, and preserved pre-synaptic boutons. Combining DMT with surgical reimplantation further potentiated these effects and upregulated GDNF expression, suggesting a synergistic neuroprotective benefit. DMT shows promise as a neuroprotective agent for CNS/PNS interface injuries.
Neuroscience of consciousness
January 1, 2026
James W Sanders, Raphaël Millière, Ema Demšar et al.
The psychedelic compound DMT induces highly immersive experiences that often include encounters with seemingly sentient presences. Using micro-phenomenology, immersion under DMT was characterized as a structured continuum from subtle to gross forms. Twenty-three participants received 20 mg intravenous DMT during fMRI-EEG, followed by detailed interviews. Analysis yielded 125 phenomenological categories describing structural dimensions like sensory faculties, spatial organization, and self-world configuration. Bodily effects typically preceded visual and auditory ones, and perceived presences emerged only after multisensory integration and 3D spatial characteristics had developed, illustrating a hierarchical relationship between subtle and gross immersion. Perceived presences varied widely in sensory modality, semantic complexity, and relational mode, showing immersion as a dynamic, constructive process.