Limpet_Chicken
Bluelighter
A question popped into my head posting in the big and dandy amanita thread in PD, someone posted a link describing someone's extended and extensive use of low-dose A.Muscaria as a tonic and to beat back the winter blues, and mentioned it caused no tolerance, or withdrawal, fiending after long term use.
My curiosity was, as muscimol is a potent agonist at the GABA binding site on GABAa, could it be mimicking GABA sufficiently as to act enough like it not to cause a tolerance, do endogenous agonist ligands cause downregulation or desensitisation? it would make sense for the native agonist for a receptor to cause little functional tolerance, homeostasis-wise, I know its a plastic process and forever in flux, but do endogenous ligands that pass the BBB cause tolerance by any means usually cause a tolerance if administered in quantities that would be released in normal neurotransmission?
Not that there are that many, most seem to be blocked by the BBB and exert only peripheral effects, GABA, some large peptides, serotonin, oxytocin, most seem to be unable to get in there if taken from the outside, which is likely again a good thing, from the bodys point of view.
My curiosity was, as muscimol is a potent agonist at the GABA binding site on GABAa, could it be mimicking GABA sufficiently as to act enough like it not to cause a tolerance, do endogenous agonist ligands cause downregulation or desensitisation? it would make sense for the native agonist for a receptor to cause little functional tolerance, homeostasis-wise, I know its a plastic process and forever in flux, but do endogenous ligands that pass the BBB cause tolerance by any means usually cause a tolerance if administered in quantities that would be released in normal neurotransmission?
Not that there are that many, most seem to be blocked by the BBB and exert only peripheral effects, GABA, some large peptides, serotonin, oxytocin, most seem to be unable to get in there if taken from the outside, which is likely again a good thing, from the bodys point of view.
