Cactus alkaloids are alkaloids that occur in cactus. Structurally, they are tetrahydroisoquinolines and phenylethylamines.
Occurrence and Representatives
editCactus alkaloids are found in the cactus family, particularly in the genus Lophophora, which alone contains over 40 known compounds. The alkaloids can be categorized into two groups, derived from phenethylamine and tetrahydroisoquinoline, respectively. The primary alkaloid in Lophophora williamsii (in terms of quantity) is mescaline, followed by pellotine. In the species Lophophora diffusa and Lophophora fricii, the primary alkaloid is pellotine, followed by anhalonidine in L. fricii and anhalamine in L. diffusa. In species outside the genus Lophophora, the content and variety of cactus alkaloids are significantly lower, but some contain compounds such as hordenine, N-methyltyramine, mescaline, or pellotine.[1] A number of psychoactive cacti are found in the genus Echinopsis, such as the San Pedro cactus.[2]
Biosynthesis
editThe biosynthesis of cactus alkaloids starts from the amino acid tyrosine and proceeds initially via tyramine and dopamine. By introducing a third hydroxy group and methylation of all three hydroxy groups, mescaline is formed. A tetrahydroisoquinoline scaffold can also be constructed from the intermediates of mescaline biosynthesis by a ring closure, resulting in anhalamine and anhalonidine. Anhalonidine is the biosynthetic precursor of anhalonine, in which a benzodioxole unit is formed from a hydroxyl and a methoxy group. Further branching of the biosynthetic pathways occurs through the methylation of the amino group from dopamine. This pathway leads to pellotine and subsequently to lophophorin.[1]
Synthesis
editVarious synthetic methods for cactus alkaloids are known. In the case of tetrahydroisoquinoline compounds, the ring system is usually built up by a Bischler-Napieralski reaction.[1] Anhalamine, anhalidine, anhalonidine, and pellotine can be synthesized starting from mescaline, among others.[3]
Pharmacological Effect
editMescaline is a psychedelic and is responsible for the hallucinogenic properties of Lophophora williamsii (peyote). The other alkaloids predominantly exhibit much less pronounced pharmacological effects and may have anticonvulsant properties. Pellotine was briefly used as a sedative in the early 20th century.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Chan, Camilla B.; Poulie, Christian B. M.; Wismann, Simon S.; Soelberg, Jens; Kristensen, Jesper L. (2021-08-27), "The Alkaloids from Lophophora diffusa and Other "False Peyotes"", Journal of Natural Products, vol. 84, no. 8, pp. 2398–2407, doi:10.1021/acs.jnatprod.1c00381
- ^ "Mescaline in Trichocereus". The Mescaline Garden. Retrieved 2024-08-30.
- ^ Brossi, A.; Schenker, F.; Leimgruber, W. (January 1964), "Synthesen in der Isochinolinreihe Neue Synthesen der Kaktusalkaloide Anhalamin, Anhalidin, rac . Anhalonidin und rac . Pellotin", Helvetica Chimica Acta, vol. 47, no. 7, pp. 2089–2098, doi:10.1002/hlca.19640470752