Murphy: It's the N-((1-methylpiperidinyl)methyl) analogue, the (R) enantiomer I think if you were inclined to do a stereoselective synthesis. Not sure if it has a JWH designation. Hopefully someone useful who is not stoned (rather topically, being an AAI haha) can be a nice person and find the reference for them for me.

I don't think compounds with that N sub mentioned earlier with substitutions on the naphthalene ring, 4-methoxy, 4-fluoro, etc have been made and assayed yet.
When/if they are, if trends follow from the trends in regular N-alkyl AAIs where the naphthalene ring has been modified, these should have affinity Ki's significantly lower than the N-((1-methylpiperidinyl)methyl) analogue ... and when you consider the non-ring-substituted parent compound already has an affinity something like 1/10th that of JWH-018... well, it may be a very strong ligand indeed, 1/20th even.
I say if the trends follow because the basic nitrogen on that piperidinyl ring might change the conformation of the molecule so that the aromatic stacking region is displaced a bit.
However this does not mean the ED50 will be 1/20th the dose of JWH-018, ED50 doesn't scale well with receptor affinity data... especially when you have to predict pharmacokinetics! Still, they will probably be ridiculously potent - this is not really a good thing at this dose level - JWH-018 is hard enough to weigh out by itself coz the dose is so small, so if it's 10% or 5% of that... well, more trouble than it's worth IMO. I would in almost all circumstances recommend that someone
not use them.
In fact, it's worth taking note that the extent of epoxidation in the naphthalene ring (which goes through a toxic epoxide intermediate on it's transformation to a diol that can be excreted...) is not well-known as vecktor briefly touched on, as well as his other cautioning of unknown possible other receptor actions.
w.r.t. AAIs mimicking THC/other cannabinoid-type CB ligands, yeah I had noticed that overlay pattern too in 3D.. and when you do an minimizing overlay in Chem3D or Chimera etc. it shows they have the appropriate groups in approximately the right locations - neat! Doesn't mean it's right though, just coz it's conveniently similar. (wow, epic long read, just noticed. sorry

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