Drugs And Rceptors Flashcards

1
Q

How can we calculate molarity of a drug?

A

Molarity = concentration / molecular weight.

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2
Q

What property of drug binding means that it is affected by concentrations?

A

Drug binding is reversible and so it is a balance between association and dissociation.

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3
Q

What is the affinity of a drug for a receptor?

A

This is how strongly the drug binds to the receptor.

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4
Q

What is efficacy?

A

This is the ability of the ligand-receptor complex to mount a cellular response.

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5
Q

Do antagonists have efficacy?

A

No because they are blocking the binding of agonists which would have efficacy.

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6
Q

What is Bmax?

A

This is the maximum binding capacity and indicates receptor number.

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7
Q

What is KD?

A

This is a measure of affinity and is the concentration at which half of the receptors are filled.

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8
Q

What is EC50?

A

This is the effective concentration of drug which gives 50% of maximal response.

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9
Q

How does dose differ from concentration?

A

Dose is the amount of a drug given to a patient, but the actual concentration at the site of action is unknown.

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10
Q

What is potency?

A

This is a property of a drug which takes into account affinity and efficacy.

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11
Q

Explain the differences between two drugs of different efficacies but different affinities.

A

If the two drugs have the same affinity then the same amount will be bound to the receptors presuming that concentrations are the same, however for the more efficacious drug there will be a greater cellular response.

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12
Q

Why must our drugs be selective?

A

This reduces unwanted side effects as it will mean that they only work at particular sites which we select them for.

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13
Q

Name three ways in which drugs can be selective.

A

Efficacy, affinity and route of administration.

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14
Q

What are spare receptors?

A

These are receptors on a cell which do not need to be filled in order for a maximal response to occur.

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15
Q

What is the significance graphically of conc against binding and Response of spare receptors?

A

Spare receptors mean that the response curve is shifted to the left compared to the binding curve.

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16
Q

In what type of receptor are spare receptors most commonly seen?

A

They are most commonly seen in ones that link to other proteins as application of the signal post-receptor is the limiting factor.

17
Q

How do spare receptors increase sensitivity?

A

They allow responses at low agonist concentrations because when that percentage of sites are full this can be adequate for a maximal response.

18
Q

What affect does changes in receptor number have?

A

This causes changes in potency and the response which is caused by the same concentration of drug.

19
Q

Define a partial agonist.

A

This may have Kd~EC50 and so with no spare receptors there is insufficient efficacy for a maximal response to occur.

20
Q

Why are partial agonists useful to us as drugs?

A

The produce a more controlled response, and work in the absence or low levels of ligand but also act as antagonists when ligand levels are high.

21
Q

What can be said about the efficacies of two drugs which display the same intrinsic efficacies?

A

They can be different, because on may require more drug to be bound to the receptors in order for a maximal response to occur.

22
Q

What is reversible competitive antagonism?

A

This is a balance between the ligand and antagonist concentration. If there is more antagonist then there will be less ligand binding and so a minimised response.

23
Q

What is IC50?

A

This is the concentration of antagonist which is needed for 50% inhibition.

24
Q

What features does irreversible competitive antagonism show?

A

With increased time or increased antagonist, the inhibition is non-surmountable because more receptors become blocked.

25
Q

What affect does irreversible competitive antagonism have at high agonist concentrations?

A

It still has the ability to suppress maximal response.

26
Q

On a conc agonist against response curve, what affect will increasing amounts of antagonist have on the curve?

A

It will cause it to keep shifting to the right.

27
Q

How does non-competitive antagonism work?

A

This binds to a site on the receptor which is not the ligand binding site. This means that it causes a change in ligand affinity and or efficacy.

28
Q

Other than GPCRs, what type of receptor can non-competitive antagonism happen to?

A

This can happen to ion channels: e.g. GABA receptors.

29
Q

Give an example of high subtype receptor specificity.

A

Allosteric regulation of GPCRs is an example of this and leads to non-competitive inhibition.

30
Q

What is the difference between homologous and heterologous desensitisation?

A

In homologous, only one receptor is affected. This could be due to a decrease in receptor number for example. In heterologous, all receptors that cause that cellular process are desensitised.

31
Q

How can G protein coupled receptors be desensitised?

A

Phosphorylation of receptor, reversible receptor internalisation and down regulation,

32
Q

What enzymes can phosphorylase receptors?

A

Protein kinase C, cGMP dependant protein kinase, specific receptor kinases such as B adrenoceptor kinase.

33
Q

What is the difference between reversible receptor internalisation and down regulation?

A

For a short stimulus, the receptors are internalised by receptor mediated endocytosis, they are then sorted and recycled to the cell surface. For a longer stimulus, the receptors can be targeted to lysosomes and broken down and so the only way for resensitisation is receptor synthesis.