• N&PD Moderators: Skorpio

eating thc acetate

IGNVS

Bluelighter
Joined
Nov 12, 2006
Messages
3,244
Location
i live in fun
does thc acetate fit into the enzyme that hydroxylizes the 11 position ?

if you were to eat it that is, would you make 11-hydroxy, o-acetyl THC?

if so what are the effects of this substance?


and totaly unrelated:
are there any thc analogs with a nitrogen in the hydrocarbon tail?
 
The closest PEA you're going to get to delta-9-THC is psi-DOAM. N's in the pentanylic hydrocarbon tail are futile; it's on the wrong side of the benzene ring. The N goes where the allylic double bond is, if anywhere, two carbons away from the benzene ring of course. That position must be sp3 hybridized for the analogue to be active. The N is best left de-methylated if one is to avoid MTPP+ like neurotoxicity due to metabolic ring aromatization following ingestion. Hope that helps.
 
Why would you want a PEA though?

There are nitrogen containing analogues that are active, but I don't know a whole lot about them.
 
O-acetyl-THC is a known compound but I've only ever heard of it being smoked, and I'm not sure that there is that much of a difference in either effects or potency from THC itself, as THC is so lipid soluble already that acetylating it does not change the pharmacokinetics to nearly the same extent as acetylating morphine or psilocin. However I'm sure there would be some subtle differences.

Yes there are several THC analogues with a nitrogen in the alkyl chain, but has to be a tertiary nitrogen rather than an NH or NH2 to maintain the lipophilicity

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O-1057

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O-1125

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O-2545

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O-2694
 
acetylating THC in the right places increases the potency by atleast 2-3x
 
i know about thc acetate man. i just want to know if it turns into 11-hydroxy-O-acetyl THC when you eat it.
 
"Stereospecific and regioselective hydrolysis of cannabinoid esters by ES46.5K, an esterase from mouse hepatic microsomes, and its differences from carboxylesterases of rabbit and porcine liver."
Watanabe, Kazuhito; Matsunaga, Tamihide; Kimura, Toshiyuki; Funahashi, Tatsuya; Yamaori, Satoshi; Shoyama, Yukihiro; Yamamoto, Ikuo.
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin 2005, 28(9), p.1743

Abstract

The properties of ES46.5K, an esterase from mouse hepatic microsomes, were compared with those of carboxylesterases from rabbit and porcine liver. The inhibitory profile with a serine hydrolase inhibitor (bis-p-nitrophenylphosphate) and detergents (sodium dodecylsulfate, Emulgen 911) was different between ES46.5K and the carboxylesterases. Bis-p-nitrophenylphosphate (0.1 mM) markedly inhibited the catalytic activity of the carboxylesterases but not that of ES46.5K. Emulgen 911 (0.05-0.25%) inhibited the catalytic activity of the carboxylesterases, whereas the detergent conversely stimulated that of ES46.5K by 150%. The two carboxylesterases catalyzed the hydrolysis of acetate esters of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) analogs with different side chain lengths (C1-C5), although ES46.5K showed marginal activity only against the acetate of D8-tetrahydrocannabiorcol, a Me side chain deriv. of D8-THC. ES46.5K hydrolyzed cannabinoid esters stereospecifically and regioselectively. The esterase hydrolyzed 8a-acetoxy-D9-tetrahydrocannabinol (8a-acetoxy-D9-THC, 5.62 nmol/min/mg protein), while the enzyme did not hydrolyze 8b-acetoxy-D9-THC, 7a-acetoxy-, and 7b-acetoxy-D8-THC at all. In contrast, the carboxylesterases from rabbit and porcine liver hydrolyzed 8b-acetoxy-D9-THC efficiently but not 8a-acetoxy-D9-THC. ES46.5K hydrolyzed side chain acetoxy derivs. of D8-THC at the 3'- and 4'-positions, and a Me ester of 5'-nor-D8-THC-4'-oic acid. The enzyme, however, could not hydrolyze Me esters of D8- and D9-THC-11-oic acid, while both carboxylesterases hydrolyzed side chain acetoxy derivs. of D8-THC and three Me esters of THC-oic acids. These differences in stereospecificity and regioselectivity between ES46.5K and carboxylesterases suggest that the configurations of important amino acids for the catalytic activities of these enzymes are different from each other.
Men aren't mice, neither are we rabbits or rats. But I think that hydrolysis of an O11-acetate is very likely in men.

Amen!
 
Top