Lec 3- Murder, magic and mecidice Flashcards

1
Q

Why natural products

A
  • Herbals date back to the 16th century but a history of use of natural products goes back to some of the 1st surviving records
  • First synthetic production medicine was acetylsalicylate (aspirin) (Bayer 1899)- 25M kg per annum
  • Can make far more complex molecules than synthetic chemists- we can then modify them
    • Synthetics = less sugar, no chiral centres, sulphones
  • Sea snail = ziconotide v.potent analgesic
  • Sea cucumber = Trabectedin v.potent anti-cancer drugs
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2
Q

Curare

A
  • Toxic animal and plant products have been used since some of the earliest records for hunting, war and executions
  • Some of the earliest reports of the use of natural products are as arrow poisons from 1200 BC
  • 16th.c explorers came across the use of curare from Chrondrodendron tomentosum mixed with Strychnos
  • Early 1800’s Charles Waterton and Claude Bernard experimented with curare and discovered it blocked nerve transmission (respiratory failure)
  • Richard Gill eventually managed to persuade 2 drug companies to take it on and tubocurarine was isolated- extensively used as a muscle relaxant in surgery
  • Panocurium and atracurium synthetic analogues
  • Tubocurarine binds motor end plate receptors blocking the nicotinic ACh receptor action of ACh
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3
Q

Tubocurarine and atracurium

A
  • We don’t need to remember to structures but we do need to identify the sections of the drugs and compare them to the receptors (or chemical that works at the receptor)
  • Atracurium has the ester bond- same as ACh- also has 2 of them which increases its potency
  • Tubocurarine has the positive N group which is the same as ACh and also has 2 of them meaning it is a potent binder
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4
Q

Hyoscine and Atropine

A
  • 2 plants commonly used to dispatch unwanted ‘guests’ were henbane (Hyoscyamus niger ) and deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna)
  • All members of solenaca, which includes tomatoes, potatoes but also Mandrake and Datura
  • Henbane and deadly nightshade used in low doses as hallucinogens, and as medicines by the early pharmacist
  • The main constituent of belladonna is atropine, and of henbane is hyoscine (Scopolamine) tropane alkaloids
  • Datura responsible for many accidental deaths of explorers and settlers but smoked by ancient Egyptians to relieve a toothache, and even sold in herbal cigarettes in Spain (19th.C) as having ‘sedative’ properties
  • In ancient Greece and Rome henbane used to induce trance-like states associated with prophecy
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5
Q

Hyoscine and atropine

A
  • Atropa belladonna, Hyoscyamus niger and mandragora officianarum main constituents of the original ‘witch brew’
  • Mixed with fat forms a salve that allows adsorption through the skin
  • Block the muscarinic ACh receptor selectively
  • Atropine isolated in 1831 and started to be used in ophthalmology in 1902 hyoscine began to be used as a premed in 1910
  • Ipratropium is a synthetic analogue used in the treatment of asthma by inhalation- causes muscles to relax- has the positive charged nitrogen- same as tubocurarine
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6
Q

Esere

A
  • Many toxic plants used in trial by ordeal
  • Physostigma venenosa- Calabar bean. Like many others, the effects first describes by missionaries- Physostigmine
  • The extract called Esere used in West Africa for trial by ordeal and executions
  • Medical studies led by Robert Christison in the 1850s- found esere blocked heart muscle rather than the respiratory system
  • Thomas Fraser noted that putting esere in the eye caused a contraction of the pupil and copious tear production (use as a treatment for glaucoma)- the opposite to atropine, and demonstrated it could counter its effects
  • Further studies lead to the identification of physostigmine as an active component, and directly to the discovery of ACh as a nerve transmitter and the role of AChE (blocked by the drug)
  • Still used to treat myasthenia gravis, glaucoma and Alzheimers
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7
Q

Physostigmine

A
  • Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
  • Binds covalently to the acetylcholineesterase
  • Slowly hydrolysed (hours)]
  • Physiostigmine is an AChE inhibitor- meaning that ACh doesn’t get broken down so muscle stays contracted
  • This lead to the discovery of AChE
  • MUST BE ABLE TO DRAW ACh
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8
Q

Toxic mushrooms

A
  • Amanita Muscarina- trace amount of muscarine (ACh) but ibotenic acid (NMDA) and muscimol (GABA) active components
  • Amanita phalloides- death cap mushroom
  • Amanita species responsible for 95% poisoning
  • Amanitins block RNA Po III, phalloidin F-actin polymerization
  • Effects have a slow onset
  • That is muscarine- has a Quaternary ammonium group (Positive N) = mimic ACh cause contraction
  • ibotenic acid- act at NMDA (responsible for thought process)= hallucinations
  • Phalloidin= stains cells very important
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9
Q

Ergotamine- origin

A
  • Fungal toxins have been noted for many years
  • Claviceps purpurea one of histories biggest kills- also known as ergot (first recorded 600 BC)
  • Produces ‘ergot alkaloids’ such as ergotamine
  • Contaminated bread made from infected rye- causes loss of blood flow to extremities- St.Anthony’s fire- leads to gangrene
  • Vasoconstrictive properties exploited in the treatment of post-partum bleeding (and abortion). Also noted the hallucinogenic effect
  • Studies by Hofmann led to the partially accidental discovery of further drugs
  • Ergotamine can mimic action of seratonin (6 membered ring,5 membered pyrole with N ring- with an amine)
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10
Q

Ergotamine

A
  • Synthesized in serotonergic neurons of the CNS
  • Regulation of mood, appetite and sleep
  • Some cognitive functions: memory and learning
  • Modulation of serotonin at synapses by pharmacological antidepressants
  • LSD binds 5-HT2A receptors
  • Both LSD AND ERGOTAMINE contain 5-Hydroxytrypamine
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11
Q

Relative toxicity

A
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12
Q

Penicillin

A
  • 1929 Alexander Flemming reported the observation of the lysis of Staphylcoccus by a contaminating mould
  • He demonstrated this was a more general effect on streptococci, staphylococci, pneumococci, meningococci, gonococci and diphtheria bacilli, identified the mould a penicillium and demonstrated its used to clear pneumococcal conunctivitis
  • He then gave a really bad talk about the work and as there had been similar reports before and lysozyme was being studied in more depth no on took any notice
  • Howard Florey- moved to Oxford and went on the hunt for antibiotics, rediscovered the penicillium story, but was better able to isolate the unstable antibiotic
  • Development of PenV and then discovery of cephalosporins
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13
Q

Microbial screening

A
  • Grow micro-organisms isolated from the environment
  • Screen for an activity of interest
  • Purify active components using the activity as a marker
  • Lead for drug discovery
  • Thought that <5% of organisms can be cultured in the laboratory
  • Isolating and identifying the active can be very time consuming
  • Turning a natural product into a drug can be difficult
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14
Q

Important compounds

A
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15
Q

Examples of steroid hormone derived from cholesterol

A
  • tetracyclic core ring system (6,6,6,5 ring system)
  • Fixed system-functional groups are held in place (like scaffholiding)
  • Small, simple changes have large, significant effects
  • Progesterone is semi-synthetic (made from ergosterol)
  • Osterone synthesised from ChE from mycobacterium
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16
Q

3D structure of steroid

A