International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2022)

In Vivo Bio-Activation of JWH-175 to JWH-018: Pharmacodynamic and Pharmacokinetic Studies in Mice

  • Micaela Tirri,
  • Raffaella Arfè,
  • Sabrine Bilel,
  • Giorgia Corli,
  • Beatrice Marchetti,
  • Anna Fantinati,
  • Fabrizio Vincenzi,
  • Fabio De-Giorgio,
  • Cristian Camuto,
  • Monica Mazzarino,
  • Mario Barbieri,
  • Rosa Maria Gaudio,
  • Katia Varani,
  • Pier Andrea Borea,
  • Francesco Botrè,
  • Matteo Marti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23148030
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 14
p. 8030

Abstract

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3-(1-Naphthalenylmethyl)-1-pentyl-1H-indole (JWH-175) is a synthetic cannabinoid illegally marketed for its psychoactive cannabis-like effects. This study aimed to investigate and compare in vitro and in vivo pharmacodynamic activity of JWH-175 with that of 1-naphthalenyl (1-pentyl-1H-indol-3-yl)-methanone (JWH-018), as well as evaluate the in vitro (human liver microsomes) and in vivo (urine and plasma of CD-1 male mice) metabolic profile of JWH-175. In vitro binding studies showed that JWH-175 is a cannabinoid receptor agonist less potent than JWH-018 on mouse and human CB1 and CB2 receptors. In agreement with in vitro data, JWH-175 reduced the fESPS in brain hippocampal slices of mice less effectively than JWH-018. Similarly, in vivo behavioral studies showed that JWH-175 impaired sensorimotor responses, reduced breath rate and motor activity, and increased pain threshold to mechanical stimuli less potently than JWH-018. Metabolic studies demonstrated that JWH-175 is rapidly bioactivated to JWH-018 in mice blood, suggesting that in vivo effects of JWH-175 are also due to JWH-018 formation. The pharmaco-toxicological profile of JWH-175 was characterized for the first time, proving its in vivo bio-activation to the more potent agonist JWH-018. Thus, it highlighted the great importance of investigating the in vivo metabolism of synthetic cannabinoids for both clinical toxicology and forensic purposes.

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