Drug receptor interactions Flashcards

1
Q

What is affinity?

A

The strength of the attraction between a drug and its receptor
(agonists & antagonists both have affinity)

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2
Q

What does efficacy involve?

A

agonists only

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3
Q

What is the dissociation constant (KD)?

A

The K𝙳 is the concentration of the drug that occupies 50% of the receptors

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4
Q

What is the receptor occupancy equation?

A

p=[D]/[D]+KD

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5
Q

What is RT?

A
  • [R𝖳] = [DR] + [R]
  • The total number of receptors.
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6
Q

The ability of an agonist to produce a pharmacological effect in a cell/tissue depends on what 2 parameters?

A
  • binding of drug to receptor (determined by AFFINITY)
  • activation of receptors and production of response (determined by EFFICACY)
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7
Q

What is the EC50 value?

A
  • measures response
  • concentration of the drug that gives 50% of the maximum response
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8
Q

In terms of EC50, what do agonists display?

A

they have efficacy and produce a response

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9
Q

In terms of EC50, what do antagonists display?

A
  • no efficacy and bind to receptor
  • but do NOT produce a response
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10
Q

What is the receptor reserve?

A

High efficacy drugs dont need to occupy all receptors to have a response

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11
Q

What ratio of KD to EC50 do strong agonists show?

A
  • EC50 ««< KD
  • as to get 50% maximum response only a small proportion of receptors need to be occupied
  • therefore drug doesn’t need to be at KD concentration
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12
Q

What shows a higher efficacy of a drug in terms of the response and occupancy (p) curves?

A

the bigger the gap between the occupancy and the response curve, the higher the efficacy of the drug

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13
Q

What is potency?

A

how much drug is needed to produce a particular response

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14
Q

What is partial agonism?

A

how much drug is needed to produce a particular response

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15
Q

What are the 4 types of drug antagonism?

A
  • Competitive
  • Non-competitive
  • Uncompetitive
  • Physiological
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16
Q

Describe the concentration-effect curves of an agonist and increasing concentrations of antagonist B (if binding reversibly)

A
  • parallel shift in concentration-effect curve to the right
  • no reduction in maximum response
  • (basically just shows that an increase in [agonist] needed to produce same maximum response)
17
Q

Describe the concentration-effect curves of an agonist and increasing concentrations of antagonist B (if binding IRreversibly)

A
  • Increasing the [agonist] will be insufficient past a certain [antagonist] as due to the irreversible binding
  • there will be no free receptors left and so the response curve will not reach 100% response from the agonist
18
Q

Give an example of physiological antagonism

A
  • One drug may antagonise the actions of another via an action on an independent molecular target
  • Eg noradrenaline increases HR but acetylcholine decreases HR
  • Therefore if given simultaneously they antagonise each other
19
Q

What is meant by constitutive activity of G-proteins?

A
  • G proteins have a resting rate of activity which is above 0
  • antagonists will stop rate
  • agonists will increase the rate
  • inverse agonists will decrease the rate to 0
20
Q

What are inverse agonists

A
  • Negative efficacy
  • Ability to switch receptors completely off
  • Actions are blocked by COMPETITIVE antagonists
21
Q

What is tolerance

A

repeated drug administration may lead to adaptive down-regulation of receptors