Drugs And Receptors Flashcards

0
Q

Define agonist

A

Drugs that bind to receptors and cause a response

Have affinity and efficacy

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1
Q

Equation for concentration?

A

Concentration (g/L) = MWt x molarity (M)

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2
Q

Define antagonists

A

Bind to receptors but don’t cause a response

Only have affinity

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3
Q

If a drug has a low Kd, what does this mean?

A

It has a high affinity

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4
Q

What does Kd mean?

A

The concentration required to occupy 50% of receptors.

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5
Q

How do we measure Kd?

A

Binding of a radioactively labelled ligand (radioligand) to cell membranes

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6
Q

What is Bmax?

A

The maximum binding capacity of a receptor

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7
Q

What do concentration response curves measure?

A

Response in cells or tissues

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8
Q

What does EC50 show?

A

The effective concentration giving 50% of a maximum response.

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9
Q

What can a response be?

A

A change in signalling pathway

A change in cell or tissue behaviour

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10
Q

What is Emax?

A

The maximum response

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11
Q

What type of drugs are used to treat asthma?

A

Beta agonists

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12
Q

What type of receptors are found in the airways?

A

Beta 2 and M3

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13
Q

Salbutamol:
Kd for β1 = 20mM
Kd for β2 = 1mM
Which one does it have a higher affinity for?

A

β2

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14
Q

What advantage are spare receptors?

A

Increase sensitivity, allowing responses at low concentrations of agonist

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15
Q

What factor does the number of receptors affect?

A

More receptors increases potency

16
Q

What is a partial agonist?

A

A drug that cannot produce a maximal response, even with full receptor occupancy.

17
Q

What is a clinical use of a partial agonist?

A

Morphine is an agonist. Buprenorphine is a partial agonist with a higher affinity but a lower efficacy. Provides adequate pain control with less respiratory depression.

18
Q

What are the types of antagonists?

A

Reversible competitive antagonism
Irreversible competitive antagonism
Non-competitive antagonism

19
Q

What is IC50?

A

The concentration of an antagonist that gives 50% inhibition

20
Q

What is irreversible competitive antagonism?

A

When the antagonist dissociates sloe elf or not at all.

With increased time or [antagonist], more receptors are blocked and non-surmountable

21
Q

When does homologous desensitisation occur?

A

When the response from a single stimulated receptor population is reduced

22
Q

When does heterologous desensitisation occur?

A

When response to other agonists become blunted after a single receptor has been continuously stimulated.

23
Q

What is intrinsic efficacy?

A

A measure of the ability of the drug to activate the receptor