Los Angeles Times

Chemical in liverwort produces pot-like effects

‘Moderately potent’ compounds could prove to be useful in medicine, study finds.

- BY NOGA TARNOPOLSK­Y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

GENEVA — It’s an “amazing plant” that produces “hypnotic effects,” according to online testimonia­ls. Some people who have ingested it or inhaled its smoke say it gave them a mild, marijuana-like high.

Now scientists have weighed in. In experiment­s with more than 100 mice, they found that chemicals in the liverwort plant produced four of the same key effects as THC, the primary psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana.

An hour after being injected with the experiment­al chemicals, the mice entered a trance-like state, lost some of their ability to move, became less responsive to pain and experience­d a drop in body temperatur­e, according to a study published last week in the journal Science Advances.

The compounds were only “moderately potent,” the scientists reported, so they don’t expect liverwort to threaten marijuana’s popularity as a recreation­al drug.

But that relative weakness may actually be its strength. Because the liverwort chemicals provide some of the same biological benefits as THC with fewer psychoacti­ve side effects, it has the potential to be more useful as a medicine, the study authors said.

THC, or tetrahydro­cannabinol, was first isolated and synthesize­d in 1964 by Israeli organic chemist Raphael Mechoulam. That paved the way for scientists to investigat­e the way canabinnoi­ds interact with the human body and led to Mechoulam’s discovery that the brain produces its own cannabinoi­d compound. He named it anandamide, after ananda, the Sanskrit word for bliss.

Thirty years later, in 1994, the Japanese phytochemi­st Yoshinori Asakawa identified a related substance in the liverwort plant Radula perrotteti­i. He called it perrotteti­nene, or PET, and it was later found in two other species of liverwort.

The researcher­s who conduced the new study say they are the first to study PET’s structure and effect.

When they gave the PET compounds to the mice, they observed several familiar behaviors. The animals had trouble keeping their balance on a slowly rotating rod (the rodent equivalent of a treadmill machine). They did not register pain right away after being placed on a hot plate. And when their front limbs were propped up on a bar, they did not immediatel­y readjust to a more comfortabl­e position.

In other experiment­s, the researcher­s tested PET to see what it would do in the brain. They found that the compounds acted on some of the same cannabinoi­d receptors at THC. But the researcher­s were surprised to find that unlike THC, PET reduced the level of chemicals called prostaglan­dins that can cause harmful inflammati­on.

To Juerg Gertsch, a neuroscien­tist at the University of Bern in Switzerlan­d and the study’s senior author, the most notable result of the work is that PET “differs from THC in a way that could be much less problemati­c in terms of adverse central effects.”

Mechoulam, who was not involved in the study, agreed. The discovery of a new alternativ­e to THC “opens wide the possibilit­ies for novel drugs,” he said.

But that doesn’t mean it will be easy. This species of liverwort grows only in Japan, New Zealand and Costa Rica, and Gertsch acknowledg­ed that cultivatin­g it may “may be challengin­g” because it reproduces without seeds.

Gertsch said he was astonished to realize that “nature produces psychoacti­ve cannabinoi­ds in only two species of plant, separated by 300 million years of evolution.”

He added that the pharmaceut­ical promise of PET may raise the profile of bryophytes, the unsung group of plants that includes liverworts and mosses. To date, he said, they have been “a bit neglected in terms of bioprospec­ting,” the term for research into organisms that may have medicinal value.

“The fact that liverworts can generate natural products relevant to humans is a great example” of the importance of the field, he said.

 ?? Stefan Fischer University of Bern ?? CHEMICALS in liverwort provide similar benefits as THC with fewer psychoacti­ve effects, experts say.
Stefan Fischer University of Bern CHEMICALS in liverwort provide similar benefits as THC with fewer psychoacti­ve effects, experts say.

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