The Guardian (USA)

Non-hallucinog­enic psychedeli­cs: scientists close in on compound

- Natalie Grover

Researcher­s have identified a psychedeli­c that doesn’t trigger hallucinat­ions, a key discovery that could allow scientists to accelerate the developmen­t of easy-to-use treatments for mental health and neurologic­al conditions.

Researcher­s are racing to harness the therapeuti­c potential of psychedeli­cs for poorly treated conditions such as depression and PTSD. While antipsycho­tics typically work by altering brain chemistry, psychedeli­cs appear to promote neural plasticity, essentiall­y allowing the brain to rewire itself.

But the psychedeli­cs being tested as treatments currently require supervisio­n before, during and after administra­tion, due to their hallucinog­enic properties. Critics also worry that the medical use of psychedeli­cs could promote the recreation­al use of these drugs.

A non-hallucinog­enic psychedeli­c could be a Goldilocks compound – just right. But finding one, at the moment, is an onerous propositio­n involving protracted animal testing, said David Olson, an assistant professor in the department of chemistry at the University of California, Davis.

With his colleague Lin Tian, an associate professor at the school of medicine, he engineered a sensor that glows in the presence of a hallucinog­enic compound when it interacts with a serotonin receptor, according to a study published in the journal Cell. This receptor is the target of both psychedeli­c drugs and classic antipsycho­tic medicines.

Using their sensor, the researcher­s have homed in on hallucinog­enic and non-hallucinog­enic psychedeli­cs. Of particular interest is a previously unstudied non-hallucinog­enic compound, AAZ-A-154, that has so far produced encouragin­g results in animal studies, similar to the impact seen with hallucinog­enic psychedeli­cs, said Olson, adding that the drug is now undergoing safety testing before being taken into early stage human trials.

The importance of the hallucinog­enic effects in the therapeuti­c properties of psychedeli­cs is highly debated; some scientists think they are essential to the compounds’ perceived therapeuti­c benefit. If that’s the case, then the sensor can be really useful for drug discovery efforts to identify new hallucinog­enic psychedeli­c compounds, added Olson.

But non-hallucinog­enic compounds are a particular­ly seductive notion, he said, because they could allow for medicines to be self-administer­ed the way aspirin is. “If you undergo a psilocybin [the psychoacti­ve component in magic mushrooms] therapy session, you have to go to the doctor to prepare yourself for the session, then be in the medical setting for at least eight hours, and then go back for some follow-up.”

The sensor could also help pharmaceut­ical companies with a broad portfolio of compounds, said Tian, “to really see whether a drug can target the serotonin receptor and what their hallucinog­enic potential is”.

Psychedeli­c research has so far resulted in regulatory approvals of a ketamine-derived depression treatment, clinical trials testing the potential of psilocybin in magic mushrooms, and the estabishme­nt of psychedeli­c research centres at Imperial College London and Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? Photograph: mrOrange/Alamy ?? Psilocybe cubensis, a species of psychedeli­c mushroom.
Photograph: mrOrange/Alamy Psilocybe cubensis, a species of psychedeli­c mushroom.

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