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- Here in alt.drugs have been lot of talk about LSD synthesis lately.
- I guess as an conclusion it can be said that the synthesis can be
- carried out with good chemistry knowledge and laboratory. Then the
- problem is where to get lysergic acid derivative for the synthesis.
- The full synthesis of the lysergic acid is too difficult. Lysergic
- acid amides can be extracted from the seeds of morning glory or
- hawaiian baby wood rose, but it is not practical, because the huge
- amount of seeds needed to get enough lysergic acid amides for
- the LSD synthesis. To my opinion the only feasible possibility is
- to cultivate ergot.
-
- What I would like to know is how difficult it is to cultivate
- Claviceps purpurea for example. Is it harder than growing psychedelic
- mushrooms? Is the following procedure any good and how hard it is
- to carry out? Any constructive comments?
-
-
- Michael Valentine Smith: Psychedelic Chemistry
-
- From pages 105-107:
-
- The Culture and Extraction of Ergot Alkaloids
-
- Make up a culture medium by combining the following ingredients in about
- 500 milliliters of distilled water in a 2 liter, small-neck flask:
-
- Sucrose .......................................... 100 grams
- Chick pea meal .................................... 50 grams
- Calcium nitrate ..................................... 1 gram
- Monopotassium phosphate ......................... 0.25 grams
- Magnesium sulphate .............................. 0.25 grams
- Potassium chloride ............................. 0.125 grams
- Ferrous sulphate heptahydrate ................... 8.34 milligrams
- Zinc sulphate heptahydrate ...................... 3.44 milligrams
-
- Add water to make up one liter, adjust pH 4 with ammonia solution and
- citric acid. Sterile by autoclaving.
-
- Inoculate the sterilized medium with Claviceps purpurea under sterile
- conditions, stopper with sterilized cotton and incubate for two weeks
- periodically testing and maintaining pH 4. After two weeks a surface
- culture will be seen on the medium. Large-scale production of the
- fungus can now begin.
-
- Obtain several ordinary 1 gallon jugs. Place a two-hole stopper in
- the necks of the jugs. Fit a short (6 inch) glass tube in one hole,
- leaving 2 inches above the stopper. Fit a short rubber tube to this.
- Fill a small (500 milliliter) Erlenmeyer flask with a dilute solution
- of sodium hypochlorite, and extend a glass tube from the rubber tube
- so the end is immersed in the hypochlorite. Fit a long, glass tube in
- the other stopper hole. It must reach near the bottom of the jug and
- have about two inches showing above the stopper. Attach a rubber tube
- to the glass tube as short or as long as desired, and fit a short glass
- tube to the end of the rubber tube. Fill a large, glass tube (1 inch x
- 6 inches) with sterile cotton and fit 1-hole stoppers in the ends.
- Fit the small, glass tube in end of the rubber tube into 1 stopper of
- the large tube. Fit another small glass tube in the other stopper.
- A rubber tube is connected to this and attached to a small air pump
- obtained from a tropical fish supply store. You now have a set-up for
- pumping air from the pump, through the cotton filter, down the long
- glass tube in the jug, through the solution to the air space in the top
- of the jug, through the short glass tube, down to the bottom of the
- Erlenmeyer flask and up through the sodium hypochlorite solution into
- the atmosphere. With this aeration equipment you can assure a supply
- of clean air to the Claviceps purpurea fungus while maintaining a
- sterile atmosphere inside the solution.
-
- Dismantle the aerators. Place all the glass tubes, rubber tubes,
- stoppers and cotton in a paper bag, seal tight with wire staples
- and sterilize in an autoclave.
-
- Fill the 1-gallon jugs 2/3 to 3/4 full with the culture medium and
- autoclave.
-
- While these things are being sterilized, homogenize in a blender the
- culture already obtained and use it to inoculate the media in the
- gallon jugs. The blender must be sterile. Everything must be sterile.
-
- Assemble the aerators. Start the pumps. A slow bubbling in each jug
- will provide enough oxygen to the cultures. A single pump can, of
- course, be connected to several filters.
-
- Let everything sit a room temperature (25 C) in a fairly dark place
- (never expose ergot alkaloids to bright light - they decompose) for
- a period of ten days.
-
- After ten days adjust the culture to 1% ethanol using 95% ethanol
- under sterile conditions. Maintain growth for another two weeks.
-
- After total of 24 days growth period the culture should be considered
- mature. Make the culture acidic with tartaric acid and homogenize in
- a blender for one hour.
-
- Adjust to pH 9 with ammonium hydroxide and extract with benzene or
- chloroform/iso-butanol mixture.
-
- Extract again with alcoholic tartaric acid and evaporate in a vacuum
- to dryness. The dry material in the salt (i.e., the tartaric acid salt,
- the tartrate) of the ergot alkaloids, and is stored in this form because
- the free basic material is too unstable and decomposes readily in the
- presence of light, heat, moisture and air.
-
- To recover the free base for extraction of the amide of synthesis to
- LSD, make the tartrate basic with ammonia to pH 9, extract with chloroform
- and evaporate in vacuo.
-
- If no source of pure Claviceps purpurea fungus can be found, it may be
- necessary to make a field trip to obtain the ergot growths from rye or
- other cereal grasses. Rye grass is by far the best choice. The ergot will
- appear as a blackish growth on the tops of the rye where the seeds are
- and are referred to as "heads of ergot." From these heads of ergot sprout
- the Claviceps purpurea fungi. They have long steams with bulbous heads when
- seen under a strong glass or microscope. It is these that must be removed
- from the ergot, free from contamination, and used to inoculate the culture
- media. The need for absolute sterility cannot be overstressed. Consult any
- elementary text on bacteriology for the correct equipment and procedures.
- Avoid prolonged contact with ergot compounds, as they are poisonous and
- can be fatal.
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