Ibogaine induces juvenile-like plasticity and modulates functional and structural regulators of plasticity in the adult mouse visual cortex.
BMC neuroscience May 13, 2026 Alejo Acuña, Federico Billeri, Valentino Totaro et al.
A single dose of ibogaine (40 mg/kg) reinstates juvenile-like experience-dependent plasticity in the adult mouse visual cortex. Adult mice given ibogaine and then four days of monocular deprivation showed reduced visual acuity in the deprived eye and decreased dendritic spine density in the binocular visual cortex, effects not seen in vehicle-treated mice. Ibogaine alone did not alter these measures. The plasticity-enhancing effect was accompanied by reductions in perineuronal nets, parvalbumin-positive interneuron staining, and vesicular GABA transporter-labeled inhibitory puncta. These findings suggest ibogaine can reopen windows of heightened cortical adaptability by reducing structural and inhibitory brakes on plasticity.