What makes a good drug? Desirable drug properties Flashcards

1
Q

True/False? Structure-based drug design is linked to drug-like properties

A

False

However a lead compound must be optimized in tandem with structure-based research

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2
Q

What is a necessary property of any drug-to-be?

A

It must be soluble

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3
Q

What method of administration faces the most barriers before reaching the target tissue? Why is that method used anyway?

A

Oral administration

It is very convenient

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4
Q

Where are drugs absorbed when they are taken orally?

A

In the microvili of the small intestine, via the blood vessels feeding to the portal vein

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5
Q

What property determines intestinal absorption rate and oral bioavailability?

A

Permeability

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6
Q

How are most drugs permeated through the intestines?

A

Passively

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7
Q

How can permeability be increased?

A

Removing ionizable groups, increasing logP, and decreasing size and polarity

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8
Q

Why is there a window of logP values instead of a cutoff for intestinal permeability?

A

The drug has to go from being in an aqueous environment to the lipid membrane, into the aqueous cytosol, back to the lipid membrane, then the aqueous bloodstream

Too High a logP and it won’t leave the bilayer
Too low and it won’t ever partition

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9
Q

How does charge affect permeability?

A

Charge means lower logP, meaning less permeability

Acids and bases should be neutral to maximize their permeability

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10
Q

Why do acidic drugs have a higher permeability than bases?

A

The neutral pH inside the cell will sequester the charged form of the drug making it very difficult for it to be effluxed (basic drugs stay neutral and establish an equilibrium across the membrane)

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11
Q

What are the 5 main uses of active transporters?

A
Bioavailability
Excretion
Metabolism
Excretion
Brain drug exposure
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12
Q

What kind of drug does PEPT1 transport?

A

Peptide-like drugs

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13
Q

How can drugs interact to increase bioavailability?

A

By having one drug modify/compete with transporters for another drug

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14
Q

What is an advantage of using a prodrug (or a proprodrug in the case of valacyclovir)?

A

Using an inactive form of a drug with moieties that allow for specific transport only to be modified into the functional version of the drug once inside the target tissue

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15
Q

What is P-glycoprotein and what does it do?

A

Efflux pump

mediates ATP-dependent export of drugs from cells

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16
Q

How can you measure Pgp efflux pump effect?

A

Grow epithelial monolayer on porous membrane

Load drugs on one side of layer, let equilibrate and measure conc on other side

17
Q

When is Pgp efflux desirable?

A

For tissue specificity

eg a drug that you want in the periphery but not in the brain

18
Q

What are the two phases of metabolism?

A

Phase I: oxidative or hydrolytic process like hydroxylation or ester hydrolysis
Phase II: enzyme-catalyzed conjugation with glucuronic acid, sulfate, etc

19
Q

What is first pass metabolism and how does grapefruit juice alter it?

A

The initial breakdown of most drugs takes place in the liver via CYP3A enzymes

Grapefruit juice inhibits these, increasing the amount of drug entering the bloodstream (can be good and bad)

20
Q

What are 4 of the 7 ways to Improve phase I metabolic stability?

A
Block metabolic sites by adding fluorine (or other blocking groups)
Remove labile functional groups
Cyclization
Change the ring size
Chance chirality
Reduce lipophilicity
Replace unstable groups
21
Q

What are the 2 ways to improve phase II metabolic stability?

A

Introduce electron-withdrawing groups or steric hindrance

Change in phenolic hydroxyl to bioisostere group

22
Q

Why do acidic drugs stay in the body longer than basic drugs?

A

The acidic urine favors the neutral drug, making it equilibrate with the cell plasma, whose pH of 7 sequesters its charged form

23
Q

What are the 5 direct mechanisms the microbiome can have on a drug?

A

Prodrug -> active metabolite
Active metaolite -> inactive metabolite
Drug -> microbial inhibition
Drug -> selective bacterial growth

24
Q

What are two indirect mechanisms the microbiome can affect the host?

A

Microbial metabolites

Microbiota-modified host metabolites

25
Q

What are the three ways the microbiome gets access to drugs?

A

Orally through the intestine
Intestinal efflux
Billiary excretion

26
Q

Where does gut microbiota metabolism occur?

A

In the colon (where most bacteria are)

27
Q

What do the criteria of a ‘good’ drug depend on? (4)

A

The method of administration
The target organ/tissue/cell type
The required circulation time
The required dose

28
Q

What are the Lipinski’s Rules of 5? What do they suggest?

A

Rules that were determined from studying drugs that failed and drugs that were readily bioavailable to see what each group had in common

It was determined that Poor absorption occurred more often when:
> 5 H-bond donors (count all OHs and NHs)
MW > 500
logP > 5
> 10 H-bond acceptors (count all Ns and Os)

The only exceptions are drugs that are substrates for biological transporters