Muscimol

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Muscimol
IUPAC name 5-(Aminomethyl)-3(2H)-isoxazolone
Molecular formula C4H6N2O2
Identifiers
CAS number [18174-72-6]
SMILES NCc1cc(O)no1
Properties
Molar mass 114.10 g/mol
Melting point

184-185°C

Solubility in water very soluble
Solubility in ethanol Slightly soluble
Solubility very soluble
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for
materials in their standard state
(at 25 °C, 100 kPa)

Infobox disclaimer and references

Muscimol (agarin, pantherine) is the major psychoactive alkaloid present in many mushrooms of the Amanita genus. Unlike psilocybin, a tryptamine, muscimol is a potent, selective agonist for one of the brain's primary neurotransmitters (GABAA).

Contents

Muscimol is the product of the decarboxylation or drying of ibotenic acid.

Amanita muscaria, which contains muscimol
Amanita muscaria, which contains muscimol

Muscimol is produced naturally in the mushrooms Amanita muscaria, Amanita pantherina, and Amanita gemmata, along with muscarine, muscazone, and ibotenic acid. However, the only mushroom amongst these that is safe for human consumption would be A. Muscaria, being as the other two are lethally poisonous. It is thought that, in A. muscaria, the layer just below the skin of the cap contains the highest amount of muscimol, and is therefore the most psychoactive portion.

Muscimol is a potent GABAA agonist, which is a receptor for the brain's major inhibitory neurotransmitter, GABA. The primary use for muscimol has become lab research, as the chemical essentially "turns off" part of the brain. When muscimol is administered, it has been shown active in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum.

During a test involving rabbits connected to an EEG, muscimol showed a distinctly synchronized EEG tracing. This is substantially different from other indolic psychedelics, as brainwave patterns will generally show a desynchronization. In higher doses (2mg/kg), the EEG will show characteristic spikes.

When used in vivo, muscimol will pass through the human body, and be excreted (as muscimol) in the subject's urine.

The psychoactive dose of muscimol is 15-20mg.

LD50 mice: 3.8 mg/kg s.c, 2.5 mg/kg i.p.[1]

LD50 rats: 4.5 mg/kg i.v, 45 mg/kg orally.[1]

The effects of muscimol are substantially different from psilocybin, as the chemicals target separate parts of the brain. Muscimol has been shown to lack "structured" hallucinations in most cases, and the effects are frequently compared to a lucid dream state.

Synesthesia is also common, and increased sweating and salivation occurs from the action of another compound in the mushroom, muscarine.

  1. ^ a b [1]
  • Merck Index, 12th Edition
  • Ito Y, Segawa K, Fukuda H. 1995 "Functional diversity of GABAA receptor ligand-gated chloride channels in rat synaptoneurosomes" Synapse 19(3):188-96.
  • Rätsch, Christian. (1998). The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants. Rochester, VT: Park Street Press.
  • Beaumont K, Chilton W. S., Yamamura H. I., Enna S. J. (1978). "Muscimol binding in rat brain: association with synaptic GABA receptors.". Brain Res. 148 (1): 153-62. DOI:10.1016/0006-8993(78)90385-2. 
  • S. R. Snodgrass (1978). "Use of 3H-muscimol for GABA receptor studies". Nature 273 (1): 392 - 394. DOI:10.1038/273392a0. 
  • G. A. R. Johnston, D. R. Curtis, W. C. de Groat and A. W. Duggan (1968). "Central actions of ibotenic acid and muscimol". Biochemical Pharmacology 17 (12): 2488-2489. DOI:10.1016/0006-2952(68)90141-X. 
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