DOM-AT


DOM-AT, or DOMAT, also known as 5,8-dimethoxy-6-methyl-2-aminotetralin, is a cyclized phenethylamine and 2-aminotetralin related to the psychedelic amphetamine DOM. It is specifically the cyclized 2-aminotetralin analogue of DOM.
The compound has been found to be a more potent agonist of peripheral serotonin receptors than DOM in vitro. This activity was blocked by the serotonin receptor antagonist cinanserin and by the non-hallucinogenic serotonin receptor modulator 2-bromo-LSD. However, DOM-AT was not tested for hallucinogen-type activity in animals or humans in these studies. Subsequently, DOM-AT did not appear to show a typical hallucinogen-like profile in behavioral tests in rats. In cats, DOM-AT produced a rage reaction, while in rabbits, it produced behavioral excitation and hyperthermia. In later research, DOM-AT failed to substitute for LSD in rodent drug discrimination tests, whereas the related cyclized 2-aminoindan compound DOM-AI was effective, albeit with far lower potency than DOM. Based on these findings, DOM-AT has been deemed inactive in terms of hallucinogen-like activity and unlikely to be psychedelic in humans.
DOM-AT was first described in the scientific literature by David E. Nichols in 1973.
Other cyclized analogues of DOM and related psychedelics include DOM-CR, DMCPA, TFMBOX, jimscaline, TCB-2, LPH-5, and ZC-B.