Ibogaine, a psychedelic alkaloid, shows anti-addictive effects in humans and animals but has safety issues including toxicity and heart arrhythmias. Researchers engineered tabernanthalog, a water-soluble, non-hallucinogenic, non-toxic analogue made in a single step. In rodents, tabernanthalog promoted structural neural plasticity, reduced alcohol- and heroin-seeking behavior, and produced antidepressant-like effects. This demonstrates that careful chemical design can create safer, non-hallucinogenic variants of psychedelic compounds with therapeutic potential.
Thirteen psychoactive compounds from different chemical classes were screened in larval zebrafish for developmental toxicity. Psychedelic tryptamines and ketamine were less neurotoxic than LSD and psychostimulants. The results provide a reference database for comparing neurotoxicity profiles of novel psychedelics being developed as therapeutics.