Introduction to Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

Agonist

A

Drugs that activate receptors/stimulate biological response

e.g. Beta-agonists in Asthma

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2
Q

Antagonist

A

Drugs that block receptors

e.g. Beta-blockers in heart disease

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3
Q

Salbutamol

A

Bronchodilator - Beta2 Adrenoceptor agonist

Drug name for asthma inhalers

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4
Q

REWATCH THIS LECTURE

A
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5
Q

How does salbutamol cause bronchodilation

A

Salbutamol binds to the B2 receptor domain on lung cells which activates the receptor. This collides with the G-protein that causes it to dissociate from the alpha subunit and causes the switching out of GDP for GTP

This alpha subunit binds to the Adenylyl cyclase enzyme and activates it.

This causes it to cycolise ATP into cAMP. cAMP is a messenger that leads to muscular relaxation

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6
Q

What curve does an agonist tend to cause in terms of pharmacological response vs concentration

A

Sigmoidal curve

EC50 is the concentration that causes 50% of maximum response; measure of potency

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7
Q

How does a concentration response curve of an agonist change in the presence of a competitive antagonist and non-competitive antagonist

A

Competitive: Parallel shift to the right

Non-Competitive: Shift to the right and shrinking of curve

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