Recreational drug discovery: natural products as lead structures for the synthesis of smart drugs

* Corresponding authors

a Dipartimento di Scienze del Farmaco, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Largo Donegani 2, 28100 Novara, Italy
E-mail:giovanni.appendino@pharm.unipmn.it
Fax: +390321 375621
Tel: +390321 375744

b Dipartimento di Farmacia, Università di Napoli Federico II, Via Montesano 49, 80131 Napoli, Italy
E-mail:scatagli@unina.it
Fax: +39081 678552
Tel: +39081 678509

Abstract

Covering: up to December 2013.

Over the past decade, there has been a growing transition in recreational drugs from natural materials (marijuana, hashish, opium), natural products (morphine, cocaine), or their simple derivatives (heroin), to synthetic agents more potent than their natural prototypes, which are sometimes less harmful in the short term, or that combine properties from different classes of recreational prototypes. These agents have been namedsmart drugs, and have become popular both for personal consumption and for collective intoxication at rave parties. The reasons for this transition are varied, but are mainly regulatory and commercial. New analogues of known illegal intoxicants are invisible to most forensic detection techniques, while the alleged natural status and the lack of avert acute toxicity make them appealing to a wide range of users. On the other hand, the advent of the internet has made possible the quick dispersal of information among users and the on-line purchase of these agents and/or the precursors for their synthesis. Unlike their natural products chemotypes (ephedrine, mescaline, cathinone, psilocybin, THC), most new drugs of abuse are largely unfamiliar to the organic chemistry community as well as to health care providers. To raise awareness of the growing plague of smart drugs we have surveyed, in a medicinal chemistry fashion, their development from natural products leads, their current methods of production, and the role that clandestine home laboratories and underground chemists have played in the surge of popularity of these drugs.

Graphical abstract: Recreational drug discovery: natural products as lead structures for the synthesis of smart drugs

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Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
28 Jan 2014
First published
14 May 2014

Nat. Prod. Rep., 2014,31, 880-904

Recreational drug discovery: natural products as lead structures for the synthesis of smart drugs

G. Appendino, A. Minassi and O. Taglialatela-Scafati,Nat. Prod. Rep., 2014, 31, 880DOI: 10.1039/C4NP00010B

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