@Bentham: agreed on all accounts, though the antimuscarinic ones seem better for motion sickness than chemical emesis...would rather have them than nothing, but would rather have a good heavy dose of metoclopramide if possible. D2 antagonism is metoclopramide's (and domperidone's) main pharmacodynamic action, but antagonizing the 5-HT3 receptor (which ondansetron does) is as you pointed out part of its profile and also helpful.
Very interesting that it's specifically the M3 and M5 receptors, too. I know much less about the genetics and function of receptors than I do about what turns them on or off; I come at this as a (largely self-taught...) pharmacist-type, rather than a trained biologist. This is fascinating stuff, how biology is basically just applied chemistry...
@Mbound: be very careful with that combination, as both of those drugs are known to prolong the QT interval. I mean, who knows, maybe a fatal episode of VTach or VFib would be a feature rather than a bug for someone suicidal? But it doesn't sound fun.