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| Mitragyna speciosa is barely known in the United
States, but one of the most interesting plants we have
ever found... |
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| Kratom grows in the lush rainforests in the South of
Thailand, and has the unique position of being banned in
the country it is indigenous to...true story... |
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Mitragyna speciosa live plant
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The leaves of a tropical plant, Mitragyna speciosa KORTH. (Rubiaceae),
have been traditionally used as a substitute for opium. By phytochemical studies
on the constituents of the plant growing in Thailand as well as in Malaysia,
several 9-methoxy-Corynanthe-type monoterpenoid indole alkaloids including new
natural products were isolated. The structures of these new compounds were
elucidated by the modern spectroscopic methods and/or chiral-total syntheses.
The chiral total synthesis of (−)-mitragynine, a major component of this plant,
was achieved. Potent opioid agonistic properties of mitragynine, which acts on
μ- and δ-opioid subtype receptors, and of mitragynine pseudoindoxyl, whose
analgesic activity is more potent than that of morphine, were clarified in in
vitro experiments. The essential structural features in mitragynine for
revealing the analgesic activity were elucidated by pharmacological evaluation
of the natural and synthetic mitragynine derivatives.
Mitragynine (1) is a major alkaloidal component in the Thai traditional
medicinal herb, Mitragyna speciosa, and has been proven to exhibit analgesic
activity mediated by opioid receptors. By utilizing this natural product as a
lead compound, synthesis of some derivatives, evaluations of the
structure-activity relationship, and surveys of the intrinsic activities and
potencies on opioid receptors were performed with guinea pig ileum. The
affinities of some compounds for mu-, delta-, and kappa-receptors were
determined in a receptor binding assay. The essential structural moieties in the
Corynanthe type indole alkaloids for inducing the opioid agonistic activity were
also clarified. The oxidative derivatives of mitragynine, i.e., mitragynine
pseudoindoxyl (2) and 7-hydroxymitragynine (12), were found as opioid agonists
with higher potency than morphine in the experiment with guinea pig ileum. In
addition, 2 induced an analgesic activity in the tail flick test in mice.
Mitragynine, an indole alkaloid from Thai folk medicine
Mitragyna speciosa, exerts agonistic effects on opioid receptors. Gastric acid
secretion is proposed to be regulated by opioid receptors in the central nervous
system (CNS). Previously, we reported the dual roles (inhibition via micro-opioid
receptors and stimulation via kappa-opioid receptors) of the opioid system in
the central control of gastric acid secretion. We investigated whether
mitragynine affects gastric acid secretion via opioid receptors in the CNS.
Injection of mitragynine (30 microg) alone into the lateral cerebroventricle did
not have a significant effect on basal gastric acid secretion in the perfused
stomach of anesthetized rats. Injection of mitragynine (3-30 microg) into the
fourth cerebroventricle, like morphine, inhibited 2-deoxy-D-glucose-stimulated
gastric acid secretion. The inhibitory effect of mitragynine (30 microg) was
reversed by naloxone (100 microg). These results suggest that mitragynine has a
morphine-like action on gastric acid secretion in the CNS.
Specific to Mitragyna speciosa
(Kratom):
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