Synthesis and evaluation of substituted 2-phenylcyclobutylamines as analogs of hallucinogenic phenethylamines: lack of LSD-like biological activity
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry September 1, 1984 David E. Nichols, K. P. Jadhav, Robert Oberlender et al. 12 citations
Three new compounds—cis- and trans-2-(2,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)cyclobutylamine and trans-2-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-methylphenyl)cyclobutylamine—were synthesized as rigid versions of hallucinogenic phenylisopropylamines. In rats trained to distinguish LSD from saline, the cis compound did not produce LSD-like effects at doses up to 20 mg/kg. Both trans compounds partially mimicked LSD at 5 mg/kg or higher. In contrast, a related cyclopropylamine compound fully substituted for LSD. The trans cyclobutylamines were about 50 to 75 times less potent than the cyclopropylamine analogue. The lack of full generalization suggests these cyclobutylamines either produce different effects from LSD or lack discriminative effects entirely.