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Volume 6, Issue 6(Suppl)

J Clin Toxicol 2016

ISSN: 2161-0495, JCT an open access journal

Page 53

Notes:

Euro Toxicology 2016

October 24-26, 2016

conferenceseries

.com

Toxicology & Applied Pharmacology

October 24-26, 2016 Rome, Italy

7

th

Euro-Global Summit on

Natural and synthetic cannabinoids: The good, the bad, and the tragic

Anna Radominska Pandya

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, USA

K

2, also called “Spice” or “Synthetic Marijuana,” is a rapidly emerging drug of abuse that possesses psychoactive properties

similar to those of ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol (∆9-THC). K2 use has exploded in many sections of the population including

teenagers and first time drug users. Use of K2 can result in extreme agitation, hallucinations, supraventricular tachycardia,

syncope and seizures. The presence of more than 20 different K2-aminoalkyl indoles (AAIs) have been reported in various

K2s, but the two most commonly observed are JWH-018 and JWH-073; however, new generations of structurally related

compounds are constantly being produced. Our studies demonstrate for the first time that the native K2s undergoes extensive

metabolism by cytochrome P450s and UDP glucuronosyltransferases. Due to the activity of these enzymes, a variety of

hydroxylated metabolites, have been biosythesized and excreted in human urine primarily as glucuronidated conjugates. These

metabolites were identified and characterized using LC-MS/MS and HPLC-UV/Vis, and steady state kinetic analyses were also

investigated. We have also shown that these K2 products cause psychoactive effects similar to those of ∆9-THC by activating

CB1 cannabinoid receptors (CB1Rs) in the central nervous system. Moreover, CBRs were able to bind several hydroxylated

and glucuronidated K2-AAI metabolites with an affinity similar to that of the parent compound. Finally, our

in vivo

data

demonstrates that K2 metabolites retain biological activity in mice. The fact that some hydroxylated derivatives and their

glucuronides can retain their biological activity makes the study of these compounds essential for understanding their severe

toxicity and pharmacokinetics/dynamics. We hypothesize that the severe effects observed for some K2 users could be related

to a defect in their metabolism.

Biography

Anna Radominska Pandya serves as a Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at UAMS; and she is the Editor in Chief for

Drug

Metabolism Review

. She received her PhD from the Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw, Poland. She has published

175 papers in various peer-reviewed journals, and she has received twelve R01 grants from the NIH and DoD. Her research interests include: The regulation and

suppression of human UGTs and their role as anti-proliferative agents in cancer models, the interactions between UGTs and cannabinoid receptors, the delivery

of UGT genes and drugs into cancer cells using nanomaterial, and the roles of UGTs in the biotransformation of drugs including resveratrols and drugs of abuse

such as marijuana and synthetic cannabinoids.

RadominskaAnna@uams.edu

Anna Radominska Pandya, J Clin Toxicol 2016, 6:6(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-0495.C1.021