antagonists and quantitative pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

in terms of efficacy and affinity describe antagonists ?

A

contains affinity as it holds the ability to bind to the receptor by obeying the law of mass action, however, it does not contain efficacy as no measurable response is seen.

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2
Q

chemical antagnoist ?

A

A chemical antagonist works as one drug antagonises the action of another by chemically combining with it

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3
Q

physiological antagonism ?

A

A physiological antagonist is when two drugs counteract each other by producing opposing effects on different receptors. For example, a potassium blocker could increase the amplitude of a twitch in skeletal muscles, while a nicotinic receptor antagonist would decrease the twitch.

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4
Q

pharmacological antagonism ?

A

Pharmacological antagonism: when drugs counteract each other by acting on the SAME receptor type.

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5
Q

high beta rate ?

A

If a drug has a high beta rate then this is a full agonist

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6
Q

alpha rate high ?

A

alpha rate is high then this is probably a partial agonist as it drives the receptor from the active state into the non active state.

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7
Q

receptor occupation and agonism ?

A

In addition to not producing a response, the occupation of the receptor by the antagonist reduces the ability of the agonist to interact with the receptor. Thus antagonists reduce the responses produced by agonists , as they will have a higher binding affinity for the receptor preventing the agonists binding to produce a response.

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8
Q

how can the effects of an antagonist be reversed ?

A

The effects the antagonists have on the agonists can be reversed by increasing the agonist concentration which will restore the response that is blunted by the antagonist.

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9
Q

CRC for competitive antagonism ?

A

Note that the control curve is shifted to the right and in a parallel fashion by increasing concentrations of the antagonist. As you increase the antagonist concentration the curve shifts to the right and doesn’t affect the Max. This is competitive antagonism

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10
Q

how did Gaddum find a way to derive the dissocation constant for the antagonist ?

A

Gaddum in 1937 found a way to derive the dissociation constant for the antagonist from the rightward shift in the agonist concentration curve. He did this by extending the Hill-Langmuir equation to describe the reaction involving two or more competing drugs binding to a single site on a receptor. Applying the rules from law of mass action, the occupancy equation becomes in the presence of a competitive antagonist.

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11
Q

Ka

A

dissocation constant (Kd) for agonist

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12
Q

Kb?

A

dissociation constant (Kd) for antagonist

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13
Q

XA

A

agonist concentration

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14
Q

Xb

A

antagonist concentration

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15
Q

R?

A

Gaddum quantified the rightwards shifts of curves in the presence of the antagonist, assuming that equal responses (e.g. 50% maximum) are produced by an equal proportional occupation of the receptor population. Rightward shift of an agonist concentration response curve are quantified by the ratio (r) of agonist concentrations required to produce the same response in the presence and absence of the antagonist

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16
Q

what do you plot ?

A

You plot the control response in the absence and presence of an antagonist this means a rightward shift. You then calculate the Ec50 and ratio.

17
Q

r=2 mean ?

A

When r =2 this means that twice as much agonist is required to produce the same response with the antagonist present.

18
Q

Kb equation ?

A

the gaddum equation can be rearrnaged that’s the concentration of the blocker divided by r the dose of agonist to get responses.

19
Q

limitation of Kb ?

A

for the equation below only one data point has been used to calculate the antagonist dissociation and it is assumed that the antagonist is competitive.

20
Q

logarithim form of schild or Gaddum Schild equation ?

A

Schild took this analysis a stage further to experimentally determine the nature of the antagonism with no underlying assumptions. The Schild or Gaddum-Schild equation can be expressed logarithmically in the form:

21
Q

what is the most accurate way of determing the Kb of antagoist ?

A

A plot of Log (r-1) against Log XB is commonly called a Schild plot and is the most accurate way of determining the KB of an antagonist.

22
Q

what did plotting log(r-1) against Log(Xb) yeild ?

A

Arunlakshana & Schild showed that plotting log (R-1) against log [XB] for increasing concentrations of antagonist yielded a straight line and that for competitive antagonism the slope of the line should be 1.

23
Q

on the graoh where can Kb be calculated ?

A

By setting the left hand side of equation to zero

0=log XB – log KB).

KB can be estimated as the point at which the line crosses the X axis. This also corresponds to the antagonist concentration which produces a dose ratio of r=2. Better way of determing Kb of antagonist as doesn’t assume any assumptions.

24
Q

what is Pa2 value ?

A

The KB can be converted into a numerically simpler term the pA2 by expressing the value as a –log

pA2 = - log (KB).

25
Q

if a PA2 value is 6 and 8 what is the fold difference ?

A

Remember that pA2 values are on a log scale, thus pA2 values of 6 and 8 indicate a 100-fold difference in the potencies of the antagonists.

26
Q

higher Pa2 value indicate ?

A

pA2 values the higher the value, the less antagonist has been required to produce the effect, i.e. the more potent is the antagonist.

27
Q

irreversible competitive antagonist ?

A

An irreversible competitive antagonist is when the bond between the antagonist and the receptor is so strong, that even increasing concentrations of agonists cannot displace the antagonist. This is often due to covalent bonding, e.g. by the a-adrenoceptor blocking drug phenoxybenzamine. Leads to reduction in amplitude of the maximum response and curves not parallel.

28
Q

in this what proportition are the control curve ?

A

Control curve only a very small proportion (2 %) of the receptors are required to produce a maximal response “Spare receptors”. 98% of the receptors can be occupied by the antagonist.

29
Q

non competitive antagonist ?

A

A non competitive antagonist is when antagonists act at sites other (allosteric site) than the agonist binding site. They interfere with the agonists ability to produce a response. These drugs, like irreversible competitive antagonists, produce non-parallel rightwards shifts of agonist concentration-response curves. Graphically it’s difficult to differentiate between non competitive and competitive antagonism , to differentiate between them an experiment will need to be conducted.