ebola?
Bluelight Crew
wandering girl said:I don't believe that either mescaline or 2C-E are that low.
Well, given the lack of between-study reliability in assessing EC50 values for many psychedelics, I'd be skeptical of trying to carve distinctions beyond partial agonist/full agonist. Also, this appears to be a case where selectivity for signaling cascade matters a lot. IIRC, 2ci is somewhat selective for the PLC-mediated pathway, which results in calcium ion release, over the PLA2 mediated pathway, which results in AA release, the latter proving key for psychedelia (I find myself referring to this handy summary often).
Even at very high doses, though? The main example I was thinking of for 2C-T-7 involved taking something reckless like 80 mg.
Whew...maybe, but I'm not sure if focusing on comically large doses is a good way to try to catalogue differences between compounds.
Maybe I'm wrong, but doesn't that study you linked actually put 5-HT2A as its stronger affinity?
Ummm...LSD didn't appear in the study that I linked. Referring again to the chart I was thinking of, I was misremembering completely, and LSD in fact lacks strong effects at 5ht2b. My apologies.
Here's the chart I was thinking of:
NSFW:
(I hope you realize I'm not just trying to question everything you say here either, I'm just genuinely interested in why such large differences in data would appear.)
Just seems like a congenial conversation to me. I'm enjoying your posts a lot.
And why then do some older studies rank its 5-HT2B agonism so much lower? (I hope you realize I'm not just trying to question everything you say here either, I'm just genuinely interested in why such large differences in data would appear.)
This is often due to differences in methodology, very often choice of 'hot ligand', which indicates binding via its displacement by the experimental compound.
That's really interesting about 5-MeO-DMT... definitely gives me something else to consider. You say that that's the only case, but I disagree. That would be one side, with very low 5-HT2B affinity, but the MDx family and analogues are on the other side and they can have very strong delirium.
I'm not sure that I understand you here though. If our hypothesis is that 5ht2b agonism tends to cause delirium (or any other spectrum of effects), then we'd need at least two points of comparison, a psychedelic with potent binding and reasonable efficacy at 5ht2b and another without, to determine what's causing which effects. If we only have one side of the comparison, we will face difficulty adjudicating what types of activity induce which effects. Additionally, entactogens are pretty 'dirty' comparison cases, as 5ht release of course activates 5ht2b in addition to causing a flurry of other effects. IIRC, though, cathinone series entactogens lack much affinity for 5ht2b (and vmat2, oddly) (note: I could easily be recalling such quite incorrectly, but it follows from known SAR). And then 5-meo-dmt is problematically distinct from other psychedelics, affecting 5ht2a rather weakly.
I also think that the derived dependent measure in the PlosOne paper doesn't work too well for compounds lacking potency by weight of dosage, as indicated by a couple of results lacking face validity, eg, the claim that MDMA lacks significant activity at SERT.
Perhaps the smarter thing to do when paying attention to how closely it mimics anticholinergic delirium is not to ask "Are some serotonin receptors anticholinergic?" but "How do anticholinergics cause hallucinations?" Yes, they block muscarinic acetylcholine receptors... but what's the next step from there?
Good point, though tracing out downstream effects of 5ht2b agonism and ACh antagonism, it should become clearer which question becomes most pertinent; the unifying question is, "At what point do the downstream effects of 5ht2b agonism and ACh antagonism converge, if at all?" The difficulty underlying all this discussion is that the brain involves radically intensive and extensive cross-connectivity, so one needs to take care tracing downstream mechanisms to avoid running into apparent conclusions that everything causes everything else.
I also think that we need greater conceptual clarity when describing the subjective effect of interest. Do we mean purely visual delirium, as in hallucination of realistic objects/people/scenes, etc., seemingly disparate from the proliferation of patterns typical with psychedelic visuals? Or is this linked to a signature metal effect of interest? Now, if your point of departure is serotonin syndrome as you indicated, this seems pretty important, as severe confusion is one of the most common symptoms of SS.
ebola
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