Competitive antagonists •
AP5 (APV, R-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate). •
AP7 (2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid). •
CGP-37849 •
CPPene (3-[(R)-2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl]-prop-2-enyl-1-phosphonic acid). •
Selfotel: an anxiolytic, anticonvulsant but with possible neurotoxic effects.
Uncompetitive channel blockers •
3-MeO-PCP: an analogue of PCP •
8A-PDHQ: a high affinity PCP structural analogue. •
Amantadine: used for treating
Parkinson's disease,
influenza, and
Alzheimer's disease. •
Atomoxetine: a
norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor used in the treatment of
ADHD. •
AZD6765. •
Agmatine: Blocks NMDA receptors and other cation ligand-gated channels. Can also potentiate opioid analgesia. •
Argiotoxin:
polyamine toxins produced by the orb-weaver spider (
Araneus gemma and
Argiope lobata) •
Chloroform: an early anesthetic. •
Cyclopropane: an early anesthetic. •
Delucemine: also an SSRI with neuroprotective properties. •
Desflurane: an
inhalational anesthetic. •
Dextrallorphan: a more potent analogue of dextromethorphan. •
Dextromethorphan: an
antitussive found in
OTC cough medicines. •
Dextrorphan: active metabolite of dextromethorphan. •
Dizocilpine (MK-801): an experimental drug used in scientific research. •
Ethanol: also known as
alcohol, a widely used intoxicant. •
Eticyclidine: a slightly more potent dissociative anesthetic than phencyclidine but with greater nausea/unpleasant taste, that was discontinued early in its development due to these digestive complaints. •
F-17475: an analgesic with ketamine-like discriminative stimulus effects in rodents •
Gacyclidine: an experimental drug developed for neuroprotection and is being studied for the treatment of
tinnitus. •
Halothane: an
inhalational anesthetic. •
Isoflurane: an
inhalational anesthetic. •
Ketamine: a dissociative hallucinogen with antidepressant properties used as an anesthetic in humans and animals, a possible treatment in
bipolar disorder patients with
treatment-resistant depression, and used recreationally for its effects on the CNS. •
Magnesium. •
Memantine: treatment for Alzheimer's disease. •
Methoxetamine: a novel designer drug sold on the internet. •
Methoxydine: 4-MeO-PCP. •
Minocycline. •
Neramexane: a memantine analogue with nootropic, antidepressant properties. Also a nicotinic acetylcholine antagonist. •
Nitromemantine: a novel memantine derivative. •
Nitrous oxide: used for anesthesia, particularly in dentistry. •
PD-137889: Potent NMDA receptor antagonist with roughly 30 times the potency of ketamine. Substitutes for PCP in animal studies. •
Phencyclidine: a dissociative anesthetic previously used in medicine, but its development was discontinued in the 1960s in favor of its successor ketamine due to its relatively high incidence of psychotomimetic effects. Abused recreational and legally controlled in most countries. •
Remacemide: a low affinity antagonist also a sodium-channel blocker. •
Rolicyclidine: a less potent analogue of phencyclidine, but seems to be seldom, if ever, abused. •
Sevoflurane: an
inhalational anesthetic. •
Tenocyclidine: an analogue of phencyclidine that is more potent. •
Tiletamine: an animal anesthetic. •
Eliprodil: an anticonvulsant drug with neuroprotective properties. •
Etoxadrol: a potent dissociative similar to PCP. •
Dexoxadrol: similar to etoxadrol. •
WMS-2539: potent fluorinated derivative of dexoxadrol. •
NEFA: a moderate affinity antagonist.
Non-competitive antagonists •
Aptiganel (Cerestat, CNS-1102): binds the
Mg2+ binding site within the channel of the NMDA receptor. •
HU-211: an enantiomer of the potent cannabinoid
HU-210 which lacks cannabinoid effects and instead acts as a potent non-competitive NMDA antagonist. •
Huperzine A. • Dipeptide D-Phe-L-Tyr. weakly inhibit NMDA/Gly-induced currents possibly by ifenprodil-like mechanism. •
Ibogaine: a naturally occurring
alkaloid found in plants of the family
Apocynaceae. Has been used, albeit with limited evidence, to treat opioid and other addictions. •
Remacemide: principle
metabolite is an uncompetitive antagonist with a low affinity for the binding site. •
Rhynchophylline an alkaloid, found in Kratom and Rubiaceae. •
Gabapentin: a calcium α2δ ligand that is commonly used in
diabetic neuropathy.
Glycine antagonists These drugs act at the glycine binding site: •
Rapastinel (GLYX-13) (weak partial agonist;
IA = ~20%). •
NRX-1074 (weak partial agonist). •
7-Chlorokynurenic acid. •
4-Chlorokynurenine (AV-101) (
prodrug for
7-chlorokynurenic acid). •
5,7-Dichlorokynurenic acid. •
Kynurenic acid (a naturally occurring antagonist). •
TK-40 (competitive antagonist at the GluN1 glycine binding site). •
1-Aminocyclopropanecarboxylic acid (ACPC). •
L-Phenylalanine. a naturally occurring
amino acid (equilibrium dissociation constant (KB) from Schild regression is 573 μM). •
Xenon: an anesthetic. ==Potencies==