Suvarna Garge (Editor)

THC O phosphate

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PubChem CID
  
9865413

Formula
  
C21H31O5P

Molar mass
  
394.45 g/mol

ChemSpider
  
21396139

3D model (Jmol)
  
Interactive image

THC-O-phosphate

THC-O-phosphate is a water-soluble organophosphate ester derivative of THC, which functions as a metabolic prodrug for THC itself. It was invented in 1978 in an attempt to get around the poor water solubility of THC and make it easier to inject for the purposes of animal research into its pharmacology and mechanism of action. The main disadvantage of THC phosphate ester is the slow rate of hydrolysis of the ester link, resulting in delayed onset of action and lower potency than the parent drug. Pharmacologically, it parallels the action of psilocybin as a metabolic prodrug for psilocin.

THC phosphate ester is made by reacting THC with phosphoryl chloride using pyridine as a solvent, following by quenching with water to produce THC phosphate ester. In the original research the less active but more stable isomer Δ8THC was used, but the same reaction scheme could be used to make the phosphate ester of the more active isomer Δ9THC.

References

THC-O-phosphate Wikipedia