Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Ultrapure ajulemic acid has improved CB2 selectivity with reduced CB1 activity.

By May 9, 2014No Comments
2014 May 9. pii: S0968-0896(14)00336-8. doi: 10.1016/j.bmc.2014.04.062. [Epub ahead of print]

pm8Ultrapure ajulemic acid has improved CB2 selectivity with reduced CB1 activity.

Abstract

Ajulemic acid, a side-chain analog of Δ8-THC-11-oic acid, was designed as a potent therapeutic agent free of the psychotropic adverse effects typical of most cannabinoids. Subsequent studies of ajulemic acid have yielded widely divergent findings on the occurrence of these adverse effects. To help resolve these discrepancies, we have prepared highly purified ajulemic acid using a different synthetic method than previously reported in the literature and compared its cannabinoid receptor binding constants with those obtained using several other preparations from different sources. Whereas CB2 binding did not vary greatly among all of the samples, the CB1 binding showed a wide range of affinities. The highly purified product (JBT-101) reported here had the weakest affinity for CB1 while the original preparation (HU-239) showed the strongest affinity for CB1. The CB1/CB2 ratio of affinities was 12.3 for JBT-101 whereas that for HU-239 was 0.19, a 65-fold difference. Functional responses such as catalepsy and hypothermia using JBT-101 versus HU-239 displayed reduced CB1 activity in keeping with the receptor binding data. Thus, earlier conclusions on the limited therapeutic index for ajulemic acid need to be reconsidered in the light of the data now obtained using JBT-101.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

KEYWORDS:

Ajulemic acid, Cannabinoid receptors, Synthesis

PMID:

 24856183
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