QUCHIC
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| Other names | BB-22; SGT-32; quinolin-8-yl 1-cyclohexylmethyl-1H-indole-3-8-carboxylate |
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| Formula | C25H24N2O2 |
| Molar mass | 384.479 g·mol−1 |
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QUCHMIC (named using EMCDDA naming standards[1] but regularly mis-named QUCHIC), also known as BB-22, SGT-32 or QUinolin-8-yl 1-CycloHexylMethyl-1H-Indole-3-8-Carboxylate) is a designer drug offered by online vendors as a cannabimimetic agent, and was first detected being sold in synthetic cannabis products in Japan in early 2013,[2] and subsequently also in New Zealand.[3]
The structure of QUCHMIC appears to use an understanding of structure-activity relationships within the indole class of cannabimimetics, although its design origins are unclear. QUCHMIC, along with QUPIC, QUFUBIC, 2F-QMPSB and NA-PINAC, represent a structurally unusual synthetic cannabinoid chemotype since they contain an ester linker at the indole 3-position rather than the precedented ketone of JWH-018 and its analogues, or the amide of SDB-001 and its analogues.
Pharmacology
[edit]BB-22 acts as a full agonist with a binding affinity of 0.217nM at CB1 and 0.338nM at CB2 cannabinoid receptors.[4]
Notes
[edit]The compound QUCHIC (QUinolin-8-yl 1-CycloHexyl-1H-Indole-3-8-Carboxylate) has never been detected
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ↑ Pulver B, Fischmann S, Gallegos A, Christie R (March 2023). "EMCDDA framework and practical guidance for naming synthetic cannabinoids". Drug Testing and Analysis. 15 (3): 255–276. doi:10.1002/dta.3403. PMID 36346325.
- ↑ Uchiyama N, Matsuda S, Kawamura M, Kikura-Hanajiri R, Goda Y (2013). "Two new-type cannabimimetic quinolinyl carboxylates, QUPIC and QUCHIC, two new cannabimimetic carboxamide derivatives, ADB-FUBINACA and ADBICA, and five synthetic cannabinoids detected with a thiophene derivative α-PVT and an opioid receptor agonist AH-7921 identified in illegal products". Forensic Toxicology. 31 (2): 223–240. doi:10.1007/s11419-013-0182-9. S2CID 1279637.
- ↑ Dunne bans further two substances found in K2. Press Release: New Zealand Government. Tuesday, 30 April 2013
- ↑ Hess C, Schoeder CT, Pillaiyar T, Madea B, Müller CE (1 July 2016). "Pharmacological evaluation of synthetic cannabinoids identified as constituents of spice". Forensic Toxicology. 34 (2): 329–343. doi:10.1007/s11419-016-0320-2. PMC 4929166. PMID 27429655.