Stimulus properties of PMMA: effect of optical isomers and conformational
restriction
by
Young R, Dukat M, Malmusi L, Glennon RA
Department of Medicinal Chemistry,
School of Pharmacy,
Virginia Commonwealth
University,
Richmond 23298-0540, USA.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1999 Oct; 64(2):449-53
ABSTRACT
para-Methoxymethamphetamine (PMMA), a structural hybrid of two central
stimulants, lacks stimulant properties but behaves in a manner similar to that
of MDMA [N-methyl-1-(3,4-methylenedioxyphenyl)-2-aminopropane]. PMMA has been
established as a training drug in drug discrimination studies, and in the
present investigation we sought to determine which optical isomer of PMMA is
primarily responsible for its stimulus effects. Because PMMA is a
conformationally flexible molecule, it was also of interest to determine what
conformation is most important for its actions. Accordingly, we prepared and
examined S(+)PMMA, R(-)PMMA, and conformationally restricted forms of PMMA:
PMMA-AT, TIQ-1, and TIQ-2. S(+)PMMA (ED50 = 0.32 mg/kg) was found to be at least
as potent as PMMA (ED50 = 0.41 mg/kg), whereas R(-)PMMA failed to result in
complete stimulus generalization. An aminotetralin-like conformation, as found
in PMMA-AT (ED50 = 0.29 mg/kg), seems to better account for the actions of PMMA
than a tetrahydroisoquinoline-like conformation because TIQ-1 and TIQ-2 failed
to result in stimulus generalization. The results of the present study further
support the concept that PMMA and MDMA share considerable similarity with
respect to their stimulus properties in animals except that PMMA lacks the
amphetaminergic stimulant component of action associated with MDMA.
PMMA
MDMA
Serotonin
Dopamine
MDMA/MDE
Entactogens
Empathogens
Phenylalkylamines
Drugs and Reward

HOME
HedWeb
HerbWeb
BLTC Research
Empathogens.com
The Good Drug Guide
Paradise-Engineering
The Hedonistic Imperative