The Independent

Moss could have medicinal benefits similar to cannabis

- ALEX MATTHEWS-KING HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

Scientists have identified that a type of moss could have similar effects to cannabis, currently being investigat­ed for treating cramps, nausea and inflammato­ry diseases, but with less chance of being abused.

Swiss researcher­s from the University of Bern are exploring the effects of a chemical known as perrotteti­nene, with a similar structure to tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) – the chemical in cannabis that causes users to get “high”.

Perrorttet­inene is only produced by a group of liverwort moss species, collective­ly known as radula, which

is only found naturally in Japan, New Zealand and Costa Rica, the scientists said.

The study, published in the journal Science Advances yesterday, tested samples from the moss Radula perrotteti­i in mice and found it had effects that might make it a useful alternativ­e to THC.

“This natural substance has a weaker psychoacti­ve effect and, at the same time, is capable of inhibiting inflammato­ry processes in the brain,” said Andrea Chicca, part of the team at the university’s Institute of Biochemist­ry and Molecular Medicine.

More trials would be needed in animal models and humans to establish whether these effects translate into reduced pain or other symptoms, and whether it has any other harmful effects.

However, a weaker psychoacti­ve high means that it is less likely the plant could be abused recreation­ally and could avoid legal restrictio­ns that have held back the use of medicinal cannabis products in many countries.

The Home Office recently announced legislatio­ns to reclassify cannabis, meaning it can be prescribed by doctors from 1 November on a case-by-case basis.

This was in recognitio­n of its potential medicinal benefits and has opened the door to help people with conditions like epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and nausea in chemothera­py.

As well as THC, cannabis contains a number of other chemicals known as cannabinoi­ds, which have complex effects on users that are not widely understood – in part because of restrictio­ns on research.

Prior to 1994 the Cannabis sativa plant was thought to be the only naturally occurring source of these cannabinoi­d chemicals, with THC being the most potent.

But in the Nineties, Japanese researcher­s identified that these mosses produce a substance with similar molecular makeup to THC, and dubbed it perrotteti­nene, but didn’t investigat­e its effects.

“It’s astonishin­g that only two species of plants, separated by 300 million years of evolution, produce psychoacti­ve cannabinoi­ds,” said Professor Jurg Gertsch, who led the latest study.

While scientists might have ignored the mosses’ potential, the authors had previously identified that Radula marginata, a species of the moss native to New Zealand and Tasmania, is “currently sold via the internet as an emerging recreation­al drug”.

They add that whether or not it actually produces any cannabis-like effects is a subject of much debate among the online legal high communitie­s – and the researcher­s said this would need to be investigat­ed in future trials as well.

 ?? (University of Bern) ?? Liverwort moss can only be found in Japan, New Zealand and Costa Rica
(University of Bern) Liverwort moss can only be found in Japan, New Zealand and Costa Rica

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