Immunomodulatory Medications Flashcards
For immunomodulatory medications what is the main MOA
block T cell activation
What drugs are the calcineurin inhibitors
cyclosporine and tacrolimus
What protein does cyclosporine bind to, tacrolimus
Cyclophylin, FKBP-12
What happens when tacrolimus or cyclosporine bind their respective proteins
The inhibitors and the cytoplasmic receptors bound with complex with calcineurin causing inactivity
In cyclosporine what change of an amino acid would hinder the immunosuppressant activity of the drug, how
If MeLeu is changed to MeAla, the affinity for binding to cyclophylin remains unchanged but it can no longer bind calcineurin causing immunosuppresent activity to be loss
What is a structural analogue of cyclosporine, what are some advantages
voclosporin, less nephrotoxic and used in treatment for psoraisis
What change would cause no binding to calcineurin in tacrolimus
changes to C15 to C22
What drugs are mTOR inhibitors
Sirolimus/rapamycin
What is the MOA of sirlolimus/rapamycin
binds to FKBP12 and complexes with mTOR to cause inactivity
What is an analogue of rapamycin/sirolimus, what is its differeneces
everolimus, more polar and improve the pharmacokinetic characteristics by changing the half life to 20-30 hours
What enzyme metabolizes, tacrolimus, sirolimus, and cyclosporine
CYP3A4 isozymes
What are some drug interactions that come with using the CYP3A4 metabolized drugs
antibiotics (erythromycin and ketokonazol) and hypertensives (nifedipine and verapamil)
Which immunomodulatory drugs are substrates for P-gp
cyclosporine, tacrolimus, sirolimus
What drugs are antiproliferative agents
Azathioprone, mycophenolate mofetil
What is azathioprine a prodrug of , how is it converted
6-mercaptopurine (6-MP), converts to 6-MP under alkaline conditions