2CBCB-NBOMe (NBOMe-TCB-2) is a compound indirectly derived from the phenethylamine series of hallucinogens, which was discovered in 2007 at Purdue University as part of the ongoing research program of the team led by David Nichols focusing on the mapping of the specific amino acid residues responsible for ligand binding to the 5HT2A receptor. 2CBCB-NBOMe acts as a potent and selective agonist for the 5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors, with a Ki of 0.27 nM at the human 5-HT2A receptor, a similar potency to other agonists such as TCB-2, NBOMe-2C-I and Bromo-DragonFLY.[1]
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Formula | C19H22BrNO3 |
Molar mass | 392.293 g·mol−1 |
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Analogues and derivatives
editAnalogues and derivatives of 2C-B:
25-N:
- 25B-NB
- 25B-NB23DM
- 25B-NB25DM
- 25B-NB3OMe
- 25B-NB4OMe
- 25B-NBF
- 25B-NBMD
- 25B-NBOH
- 25B-NBOMe (NBOMe-2CB)
- 2C-B-FLY
- 2CBFly-NBOMe (NBOMe-2CB-Fly)
- DOB-FLY
- DOB-2-DRAGONFLY-5-BUTTERFLY
Other:
- BOB
- BOH-2C-B, β-Hydroxy-2C-B, βOH-2CB[4][5]
- BMB
- 2C-B-5-hemifly
- 2C-B-aminorex (2C-B-AR)
- 2C-B-AN
- 2C-B-BZP
- 2C-B-FLY-NB2EtO5Cl
- 2C-B-PP
- 2CB-Ind
- βk-2C-B (beta-keto 2C-B)
- N-Ethyl-2C-B
- TCB-2 (2C-BCB)
Legality
editUnited Kingdom
editThis substance is a Class A drug in the United Kingdom as a result of the N-benzylphenethylamine catch-all clause in the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971.[6]
United States
edit2CBCB-NBOMe is a controlled substance in Vermont as of January 2016.[7]
References
edit- ^ Braden MR (2007). Towards a biophysical understanding of hallucinogen action (Ph.D.). Purdue University. ProQuest 304838368.
- ^ "Explore N-(2C-B)-Fentanyl | PiHKAL · info". isomerdesign.com.
- ^ "Explore N-(2C-FLY)-Fentanyl | PiHKAL · info". isomerdesign.com.
- ^ Glennon, Richard A.; Bondarev, Mikhail L.; Khorana, Nantaka; Young, Richard; May, Jesse A.; Hellberg, Mark R.; McLaughlin, Marsha A.; Sharif, Najam A. (November 2004). "β-Oxygenated Analogues of the 5-HT2ASerotonin Receptor Agonist 1-(4-Bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-2-aminopropane". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 47 (24): 6034–6041. doi:10.1021/jm040082s. ISSN 0022-2623. PMID 15537358.
- ^ Beta-hydroxyphenylalkylamines and their use for treating glaucoma
- ^ "The Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 (Ketamine etc.) (Amendment) Order 2014". UK Statutory Instruments 2014 No. 1106. www.legislation.gov.uk.
- ^ "Regulated Drugs Rule" (PDF). Vermont Department of Health. Retrieved 14 October 2015.