Lecture 17 Flashcards
Drug+Receptor Theory I
Receptor
- Specific macromolecule that is the target for drug binding, initial site of action.
- Most are proteins, regulatory functions
- Can also be cell membranes, DNA, RNA, etc.
- Pharmacologically, drug-target interactions must elicit a biological response
- *NOT ALL DRUG BINDING PROTEINS ARE RECEPTORS**
PK v.s. PD
PK ==> Body’s action on drug (ADMET
PD ==> Drug’s action on body (drug interactions/binding)
Ligand
Moiety that interacts with receptor
Agonist
Stimulates receptor action. Can also be partial agonists.
Antagonist
Blocking receptor action, can occur by multiple mechanisms. Can also be partial antagonists.
Receptor Theory (4)
- Receptors must possess structural and steric specificity.
- Receptors are saturable and finite (limited binding sites).
- Receptors must possess high affinity for endogenous ligand at physiological concentrations.
- Once ligand binds to receptor, a recognizable event needs to occur.
Drug Requirements
- Must have right size, charge, shape, and atomic composition to interact
- Drugs vary in chemical properties
- Shape must permit binding to receptor
- Chirality can dictate receptor interactions
Saturable + Finite
- Relationship between drug concentration , effect, and receptor binding
- Drug concentration at which the receptor occupancy is at 1/2 maximal is denoted as EC50 for biological activity of that drug
High Affinity
- Receptor occupancy theory assumes that the response is proportional to the number of occupied receptors
- Receptor occupancy is a function of available ligand and affinity
Kd
-Measure of the reversible interaction between drug and receptor (denotes affinity)
Forward Reaction: [D][R]k+1
Backwards Reaction: [DR]k-1
Equilibrium: [D][R]k+1 = [DR]k-1
Kd = [D][R]/[DR] = k-1/k+1
Receptor Occupancy + Kd
- As the agonist concentration increases, receptor occupancy increases.
- Small Kd = high affinity, typically very small number (uM, nM, pM)
- As agonist affinity increases, receptor occupancy increases
Receptor Occupancy + Drug Response
- When [D] = Kd, drug occupancy will occupy ~50% of receptors
- In most cases, 50% occupancy = Kd
- Graphed as Occupancy of Receptors v.s. log[drug]
EXCEPT…
- Sometimes full effect is achieved with less than full receptor occupancy
- EC50 (Effective Concentration at 50%) is the effective concentration producing 50% response
- In this case, if fully occupied, will approximate Kd
- Graphed as Response v.s. log[drug]
Spare Receptors
- Maximal response with less than 100% occupancy
- More likely in signaling cascade due to a component of the cascade being limiting
Potency
- Property that can be also determined from dose-response curves
- Potency - dose of a drug required to produce an effect relative to a given or implied standard of reference
- More potent requires less drug to elicit the same response as a less potent drug (lower Kd or EC50 = less potent)
- *Most useful drugs are not necessarily the most potent**
Potency Comparisons
- Can get ratios of potency that can be graphed on response v.s. log(dose) graphs
- Drugs being compared have the same mechanisms