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Shuping Jia

Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, United States.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Locomotor and discriminative stimulus effects of N-cyclohexyl butylone and N-cyclohexyl methylone.

Frontiers in pharmacology January 1, 2026 Michael B Gatch, Shuping Jia, Ritu A Shetty et al.

Two synthetic cathinones found on the street, N-cyclohexyl butylone and N-cyclohexyl methylone, were tested for their psychostimulant effects in mice and rats. Both compounds stimulated locomotor activity in mice, but were less potent and less effective than methamphetamine. In rats trained to discriminate methamphetamine or cocaine from saline, N-cyclohexyl butylone fully substituted for those drugs, suggesting it could produce similar psychoactive effects and motivate illicit use. N-cyclohexyl methylone failed to fully substitute for methamphetamine or cocaine and caused convulsions at higher doses, indicating greater danger but possibly lower abuse liability. Neither compound substituted for MDMA. The large N-cyclohexyl chemical group likely reduced the drugs' effectiveness, but a longer side chain in N-cyclohexyl butylone may have counteracted this.