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Valeria Bruno

McGill University

2 papers in the library · publishing 2025

Papers

363. DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF PSILOCYBIN AND LISURIDE ON SEROTONIN AND DOPAMINE NEURONAL ACTIVITY AND BEHAVIOR

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology August 1, 2025 B. D. Richardson, Marco Pileggi, Thomas Prudhomme et al.

Psilocybin and lisuride both bind to 5-HT2A receptors, but only psilocybin produces hallucinogenic effects. In adult male mice, both drugs inhibited serotonin neuron activity in the dorsal raphe nucleus and dopamine neuron firing in the substantia nigra. A 5-HT2A antagonist blocked psilocybin's serotonin inhibition but not lisuride's, suggesting different mechanisms. Only lisuride showed an antidepressant-like effect at the highest doses. Psilocybin, but not lisuride, elicited head-twitch responses, and lisuride blocked those induced by psilocybin. Both drugs reduced locomotion. The findings indicate lisuride has antidepressant and sedative effects without hallucinogenic action, likely due to its distinct effects on serotonin and dopamine neurons.

317. PSILOCYBIN DOES NOT INDUCE CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE, BUT MODIFIES BEHAVIORAL PATTERNS IN SPRAGUE-DAWLEY RATS

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology August 1, 2025 Valeria Bruno, Bruce Richardson, Martha López-canul et al.

In adult male rats, a high dose of psilocybin (10 mg/kg) did not produce rewarding effects in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm, as there was no significant difference in time spent in the drug-paired compartment versus the vehicle-paired compartment. Psilocybin increased head-twitching, dog-shaking, and defecation while decreasing grooming, body licking, and rearing during conditioning sessions. These behavioral differences disappeared 48 hours after the last injection, indicating no long-term changes. The findings suggest psilocybin lacks rewarding properties and does not cause physical dependence, supporting its safety profile and therapeutic potential.