Delix Therapeutics Inc. has been awarded a $320,000 grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health, to support the advancement of DLX-007.
Researchers from Delix Therapeutics Inc. recently presented preclinical pharmacology data for DLX-001, a novel orally bioavailable, nonhallucinogenic neuroplastogen being developed for the treatment of neuropsychiatric diseases.
Delix Therapeutics Inc. has identified pyrrolidine psychoplastogens acting as 5-HT2A receptor modulators reported to be useful for the treatment of neurodegeneration, substance abuse and dependence, impulse control, mood, sleep, anxiety, eating and personality disorders, among others.
Psychedelic drugs may exert their effects at intracellular serotonin receptors that serotonin itself, which does not cross cell membranes, cannot reach. The findings were published in the Feb. 17, 2023, issue of Science by researchers from the University of California at Davis.
Psychedelic drugs may exert their effects at intracellular serotonin receptors that serotonin itself, which does not cross cell membranes, cannot reach. The findings were published in the Feb. 17, 2023, issue of Science by researchers from the University of California at Davis. An accompanying editorial by Evan Hess and Todd Gould at the University of Maryland School of Medicine called them “a key achievement in the understanding of the mechanism of action of psychedelics” and “an important step forward for a rapidly expanding and much-needed field of study.”
Preclinical neuroscience firm Delix Therapeutics Inc., a startup developing non-hallucinogenic analogues of psychedelics, has closed a $70 million series A financing. The new funds will help the Boston-based company advance two lead candidates through phase I trials, DLX-1 and DLX-7, with studies planned for starts in late 2022 or early 2023.