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Jack Peter Green

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

1 paper in the library · 64 citations · publishing 1970

Papers

Steric and Electronic Relationships among Some Hallucinogenic Compounds

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences September 1, 1970 Sungzong Kang, Jack Peter Green 64 citations

A common mechanism may underlie how structurally different hallucinogens—LSD, indolealkylamines, and methoxylated amphetamines—interact with their receptor. In LSD, the aromatic benzene ring A and the N-6 nitrogen are essential for activity; these sites may react with the receptor. The conformations of amphetamines and indolealkylamines position their aromatic ring and alkylamino nitrogen to align with LSD's ring A and N-6. Ring A may form a π-molecular complex with the receptor, supported by a correlation between hallucinogenic activity and the energy of the highest occupied molecular orbital. The N-6 nitrogen and its sterically congruent counterparts may form an n-π* or n-σ* donor-acceptor complex. Additional groups (methoxy, hydroxyl, pyrrole ring) contribute favorable orbital energy.