Essential Pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

Can the same receptor on a cell be coupled to different responses?

A

Yes

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2
Q

What should the ligand be in order to bind to an intracellular receptor?

A

Hydrophobic/lipid soluble

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3
Q

Give an example of a ligand that is lipid soluble…

A

Steroid hormones

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4
Q

What do intracellular receptors often regulate?

A

Rate of transcription, often known as transcription factors

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5
Q

What are the 4 types of plasma receptors?

A
  1. Ones with ion channels (ionotropic) - ligand gated channels
  2. Receptors that act and enzymes
  3. Receptors that regulate enzymes
  4. G protein coupled
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6
Q

So what is the point of receptors?

A

They enable the specificity of the action of different transmitters and hormones

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7
Q

What is the largest class of plasma receptors?

A

G protein coupled

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8
Q

What happens when a G-protein receptor is coupled to adenylyl cyclase

A

It increases cAMP which activates PKA (if unbound will do the opposite)

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9
Q

What happens when a G-protein receptor is couples to Phospholipase C?

A

Produces DAG which activates PKC

AND

IP3 which releases Ca2+ ions

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10
Q

What are PKA and PKC used for?

A

For phosphorylation - therefore regulate a host of cell proteins

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11
Q

How do drugs act?

A

By interacting with a binding site - a receptor

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12
Q

What happens the more drugs that bind to the receptors?

A

There is a bigger response until all of the receptors are filled and then increasing drug level doesn’t do anything…

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13
Q

What is efficacy?

A

Determines how good a drug is at activating a receptor - drugs can partially activate receptors

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14
Q

What is affinity?

A

How well the drug binds to the receptor

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15
Q

What is the affinity and efficacy of a full agonist?

A

High affinity

High efficacy

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16
Q

What is the affinity and efficacy of a partial agonist?

A

High affinity

Low efficacy

17
Q

What is the affinity and efficacy of an antagonist?

A

High affinity

Little to no efficacy

18
Q

Can one transmitter act on many receptor sub types? Give examples, do they always act like this?

A

Yes

Ach - agonist acts on all cholinergic receptors like nicotinic and muscarnic

Noradrenaline - agonist acting on all adrenergic receptors - alpha 1 an 2 and beta 1 an 2

But transmitters can also be selective