Decoding the structure of abuse potential for new psychoactive substances: Structure-activity relationships for abuse-related effects of 4-substituted methcathinone analogs

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Abstract

Many cathinone analogs act as substrates or inhibitors at dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin transporters (DAT, NET, SERT, respectively). Drug selectivity at DAT vs. SERT is a key determinant of abuse potential for monoamine transporter substrates and inhibitors, such that potency at DAT > SERT is associated with high abuse potential, whereas potency at DAT < SERT is associated with low abuse potential. Quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) studies with a series of 4-substituted methcathinone analogs identified volume of the 4-position substituent on the methcathinone phenyl ring as one structural determinant of both DAT vs. SERT selectivity and abuse-related behavioral effects in an intracranial self-stimulation procedure in rats. Subsequent modeling studies implicated specific amino acids in DAT and SERT that might interact with 4-substituent volume to determine effects produced by this series of cathinone analogs. These studies illustrate use of QSAR analysis to investigate pharmacology of cathinones and function of monoamine transporters.

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Negus, S. S., & Banks, M. L. (2017). Decoding the structure of abuse potential for new psychoactive substances: Structure-activity relationships for abuse-related effects of 4-substituted methcathinone analogs. In Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences (Vol. 32, pp. 119–131). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/7854_2016_18

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