Skip to content

Robert A Johnson

1 paper in the library · 72 citations · publishing 2014

Papers

Behavioral and neurochemical pharmacology of six psychoactive substituted phenethylamines: mouse locomotion, rat drug discrimination and in vitro receptor and transporter binding and function.

Psychopharmacology March 1, 2014 Amy J Eshleman, Michael J Forster, Katherine M Wolfrum et al. 72 citations

Six substituted phenethylamines (2C-C, 2C-D, 2C-E, 2C-I, 2C-T-2, and DOC) depress mouse locomotor activity, though 2C-D and 2C-E stimulate activity at low doses. Most fully substitute for hallucinogenic training compounds in rats, but none fully substitute for methamphetamine. All are full agonists at 5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors in inositol phosphate assays, and most are partial to full agonists in 5-HT2A arachidonic acid release assays, except 2C-I (antagonist). Only 2C-I shows moderate affinity for the serotonin transporter. The discriminative stimulus effects of most compounds resemble hallucinogens, not methamphetamine, but 2C-T-2 does not produce hallucinogen-like effects despite being a full agonist at 5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors.