Noribogaine generalization to the ibogaine stimulus: correlation
with noribogaine concentration in rat brain.
Zubaran C, Shoaib M, Stolerman IP, Pablo J, Mash DC
Section of Behavioural Pharmacology, Institute of Psychiatry, London, England.
The discriminative stimulus effects of ibogaine and noribogaine in rats have
been examined in relation to their concentrations in blood plasma and brain
regions and to receptor systems through which they have been proposed to act.
Rats were trained to discriminate ibogaine (10 mg/kg i.p.), the NMDA antagonist
dizocilpine (0.08 mg/kg i.p.) or the kappa-opioid agonist U50,488 (5 mg/kg
i.p.) from vehicle in a standard two-lever operant conditioning procedure
with a tandem VI-FR schedule of food reinforcement. Only rats trained on ibogaine
generalized to noribogaine, which was approximately twice as potent as the
parent compound. Noribogaine was detected in plasma and brain after administration
of ibogaine and noribogaine. At the ED50 doses for the discriminative effect,
the estimated concentrations of noribogaine in plasma, cerebral cortex, and
striatum were similar regardless of whether ibogaine or noribogaine was administered.
The findings suggest that the metabolite noribogaine may be devoid of NMDA
antagonist and kappa-opioid agonist discriminative effects and that it may
play a major role in mediating the discriminative stimulus effect of ibogaine.