Pharmacodynamics Flashcards

1
Q

Define drug receptor. What are its major functions?

A

A drug receptor is a cellular macromolecule that interacts with a drug and in doing so initiates a series of biochemical events that result in the characteristic action of the drug.

Functions:

  • recognition: receptor binds a drug or endogenous ligand
  • transduction: transfer of info
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2
Q

Define selectivity in context of drug receptor-mediated processes.

A

The hundreds of different receptors types and their unique tissue localization impart specificity of drug action; that is, the ability of a drug to exert a distinctive influence on the body.

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3
Q

What are the major mechanisms of receptor-mediated signal transduction?

A
  • G protein-coupled receptor
  • Modulate ligand-gated ion channels
  • Intrinsic enzyme activity phosphorylates diverse effector proteins
  • Regulation of gene transcription
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4
Q

What are the major attributes of drug receptor-mediated processes?

A

A. Highly compartmentalized; confers drug specificity

B. Self-limiting (most; excepting intracellular hormone receptors); potential basis for drug tolerance

C. Organized into opposing systems; another potential basis for drug tolerance as well as possible drug-drug interactions.

D. Create opportunities for signal amplification

E. Operate through a relatively small number of 2nd messenger systems; another potential basis for drug-drug interactions (essentially an expansion of attribute C).

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5
Q

What are some non-receptor modes of drug action?

A
  • interactions with small molecules or ions
  • physiochemical mechanisms
  • target rapidly dividing cells
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6
Q

What are the two underlying assumptions of the Occupancy Theory?

A
  • The effect is proportional to receptor occupancy

- Interaction is monovalent

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7
Q

What is the log dose-response curve?

A

X-axis: log Dose

Y-axis: % maximal effect

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8
Q

Define EC50.

A

The concentration of the drug producing 50% of the maximal response. An estimate of the drugs KD.

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9
Q

What is affinity?

A

Affinity, characterized as 1/KD, describes the ability of a drug to form a complex with a receptor.

The greater the affinity of the drug for its receptor the lower the concentration of drug required to occupy the receptor, i.e. its KD and EC50 are small.

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10
Q

Define potency.

A

A comparative term used to describe the relative positions of several agonist dose-response curves. i.e. if one curve is to the left of another, it is more potent than the other drug.

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11
Q

Define efficacy.

A

Characterizes the ability of a drug-receptor complex to produce a response.

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12
Q

What is the difference between a full agonist and a partial agonist?

A

Full: capable of producing maximal response. Alpha =1

Partial: drug whose maximal response is only a fraction of maximum that can be elicited. Alpha is between 0 & 1. In presence of full agonist, it may act as an antagonist.

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13
Q

What are three mechanisms of drug antagonism?

A
  • Competitive: surmountable & reversible. Shifts curve right.
  • Non-competive: insurmountable & irreversible. Maximal response decreases. Kd stays same.
  • Physiological: involves interactions between pathways mediated by different receptors. e.g. insulin vs. glucocorticoids.
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14
Q

What is an inverse agonist?

A

A drug that preferentially binds to the inactive form of a receptor (2 state model), shifting equilibrium to the inactive form. This results in an effect the opposite of that produced by an agonist.

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15
Q

What is a spare receptor?

A

When occupancy of a small percentage of receptors elicits a maximal response, the system behaves as if it has “spare” receptors.
* EC50 & KD values will be different, which is a clear violation of the Occupancy Theory.

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16
Q

What is the two-state theory of drug-receptor interactions?

A

Postulates that the receptor exists in an active and inactive form. An equilibrium exists between these forms which results in a basal or “constitutive” level of activity in the absence of the drug.

17
Q

What is the quantal log dose-response curve?

A

Some responses are all-or-none rather than graded. Quantal dose-effect curve is a frequency distribution curve of the response of a population to a drug.

Quantal dose-effect curves DO NOT provide info on a drugs KD or it’s maximal efficacy. They DO provide info on variability in response of a population.

18
Q

What is the Therapeutic index (TI)?

A

The ratio of LD50 (median lethal dose) to ED50 and is a measure of relative safety of drug.

19
Q

What is Certain Safety Factor (CSF)?

A

The ratio of the dose producing death in 1% of the population (LD1) to the dose of drug producing the therapeutic response in 99% of the population (ED99). More conservative.