Opiates/Opioids Flashcards
What is an opiate?
An alkaloid derived form the poppy, Papaver somniferum
What are the four most commonly occurring opiates?
- Morphine
- Codeine
- Papaverine
- Thebaine
What is the significance of the tertiary nitrogen in the structure of morphine?
- It is crucial for receptor anchoring and the analgesic effects of opioids
How can the structure of morphine be altered to turn it into an opioid receptor antagonist?
- The side chain that the tertiary nitrogen is on can be extended by 3+ carbons to turn it into an opioid receptor antagonist
What is the importance of the hydroxyl group in position 3 in morphine?
- Required for binding
How is the structure of codeine different to morphine and what does it mean in terms of its activity?
- Codeine is methyl morphine (methyl group instead of hydroxyl group in position 3)
- This makes it unable to bind the appropriate targets - it is a prodrug therefore as it must be converted into morphine before it can be functionally active
- For some reason (I don’t get it) it is also more lipophilic than morpheine, however it is converted into morpheine outside of the brain anyway
How is the structure of heroin different to morphine and how does its structure impact its function?
- Heroin is diacetyl morphine - remember acetyl is a methyl on a carbonyl
- The acetyl groups are at position 3 and 6
- Because there is an acetyl group at position 3, heroine cannot bind its appropriate target, unlike morphine, it is a prodrug and must be converted into morphine
- But, since it is a oxidated version of the hydroxyl group on the position 6 on the morpheine, it is much more lipophilic so can enter the brain via the BBB much more easily
Methadone and fentanyl are both …… ….. drugs
Methadone and fentanyl are both synthetic opiod drugs
What is a very important feature of methadone and fentanyl?
- They are extremely lipid soluble
Go over, once again the principles of what state drugs will be in based on their pKa and the pH of their environments (this was also covered in an earlier lecture
- If pH < pKa, the drug will largely be in the ionised form - moves less readily across membranes
- If pH > pKa, the drug will largely be in the unionised form - so can move across membranes more easily
Given that opioids are all WEAK BASES - pKa > 8, if administered orally, in what state are they likely to be in (and thus what does this mean for how readily they are absorbed at):
1) The stomach
2) The small intestine
1)
- The stomach IONISED – relatively little is absorbed as it is polar so cannot cross the phosholipid bi-layer as readily
2)
- The small intestine UNIONISED – more readily absorbed as it is non-polar so can cross phospholipid bi-layers more readily
In what state will most opioids be in in the blood?
- Blood has a pH of around 7.4 so the majority of opioids will be ionised in the blood - <20% of opioids will be unionised, and this is the component that can access tissues
What route of administration, intravenous or oral, gives a higher bioavailability for methadone and fentanyl, and why?
- Intravenous gives a higher bioavailability because if you have oral administration there is significant first pass metabolism
List morphine, fentanyl, methadone, heroin and codeine in order of decreasing lipid solubility
- Methadone
- Fentanyl
- Heroin
- Codeine
- Morphine
How is the metabolism of morphine different to the metabolism of other opioids?
- Morphine is metabolised in the liver and then excreted in the BILE
What is the main, active metabolite that is produced from the metabolism of morphine?
- Morphine-6-glucuronide
What happens to this metabolite once it is excreted into the small intestine in the bile?
- It undergoes enterohepatic cycling and returns to the blood where it can exert its effects
Describe the rate of metabolism of fentanyl and methadone
- Fentanyl is metabolised rapidly (it can be broken down by cholinesterases in the blood)
- Methadone is metabolised slowly so remains in the blood for longer
What is a use of methadone and give 2 properties in its metabolism that make it suited to this use?
- It is used to wean people off heroin and morphine
- Methadone has 2 properties that make it suited to this function: It is very lipophilic and has a slow clearance
- Therefore it persists in the fatty tissues and persists in the blood for a long time and can exert its effects and reduce cravings
- It would be bad if it had a fast clearance as you’d need to keep injecting on and on and this is risky
What are the two enzymes that are involved in codeine metabolism? State their relative rates of action
- CYP2D6 – activates codeine to morphine (O-dealkylation) - SLOW
- CYP3A4 – deactivates codeine - FAST
Why might some people feel a greater effect from codeine than others?
- Because the gene that encodes the enzyme CYP2D6 (the enzyme that converts codeine the prodrug into the active morphine) is highly polymorphic
List some endogenous opioid peptides
- Endorphins
- Enkephalins
- Dynorphins/Neoendorphins
Which opioid receptors do the following endogenous opiod peptides act on:
1) Endorphins
2) Enkephalins
3) Dynorphins
1) Endorphins - Mu or Delta
2) Enkephalins - Delta
3) Dynorphins - Kappa