Pharmacodynamics Flashcards
Pharmacodynamics definition
What the DRUG does to the BODY
4 major targets for drug action
- Receptors (acting on them)
- Ion channels (modulating or inhibiting)
- Carrier molecules (inhibiting)
- Enzymes (inhibiting)
-Regulatory proteins are commonly involved as primary targets for drug action
Non-protein target for drug action
- DNA (antimicrobial, anti tumor drugs)
- RNA (antivirus drugs)
- Osmosis (osmotic diuretics)
- Neutralizing (antiacids)
Ways that the drug can get into the cell
- Neural control
- Hormonal control
- Direct action on metabolism
- Transport molecules
Agonist vs. Antagonist
Agonist - a drug that mimics the response of the receptor to the endogeneous ligand. But when it binds, it produces an active response
Antagonist - a drugs that binds, but does not produce a response. It can prevent the receptor from being activated by the endogeneous ligand.
- Partial agonist
2. What happens when you have a partial and a full agonist?
- a drug that binds an activate the receptor, but it has only a partial efficacy.
- the concentration needed is higher, but the response will be the same as for the full agonist
Competitive vs. Non-competitive antagonist
Competitive –> competes with the endogenous ligand for the binding site on the receptors (Reversible or Irreversible)
Non- competitive –> may bind to another site other than the receptor and affect the ability of the agonist to activate it (Reversible or Irreversible)
- Agonist + competitive reversible antagonist
2. Agonist + competitive irreversible antagonist
- a higher dose is needed to have a desired effect –> 100%
- the dose remains the same and the effect will be only 50%
Drug antagonism types (5)
- Competitive: both drugs binding to the same receptor
- Non- competitive
- Pharmacokinetic: one drug affecting the metabolism, absorption and excretion of the other
- Chemical: interaction in solution
- Physiological: 2 agents producing opposing physiological effects
The two-state receptor model (5)
- the receptor contains two conformational states: active and resting which remain in equilibrium
- agonists have a higher affinity for the activated state, so it will shift the equilibrium towards the active side
- inverse agonist have a higher affinity for the resting state, so it will shift the equilibrium towards the resting side
- antagonists, are neutral. They do not affect the equilibrium, but reduces by competition for the binding of other ligands.
- all know H1 antihistamines function as inverse agonists
Desensitization (tachyphylaxis)
- when the biological response to a drug diminishes when giving it continuously or repeatedly
- Changes that happen:
1. Change in receptors: phosphorylation of intracellular regions of the receptors protein by which ion channels become desensitized
2. Loss of receptors: internalization of the receptors
3. Exhaustion of mediators: depletion of an essential intermediate substance
4. increase metabolic degradation of the drug
5. physiological adaptation
6. active extrusion of drug from cells
Signalling mechanisms for drug effect (5)
- Steroid: transmembrane diffusion of the drug
- Tyrosine kinase: transmembrane enzyme receptors, outer domain has receptor function and inner domain has effector functions
- JAK- STAT: transmembrane receptors, activation of appropriate ligand activates cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase (JAKs) which phosphorylate STAT (regulate transcription)
- Ion channels: transmembrane channels that are either open or closed by binding of a drug to the receptor site
- G- protein coupled receptors: use a coupling protein to activate a separate effector molecule
Transmembrane protein receptors (3)
- Ligand- gated
- G- protein coupled receptors
- Tyrosine kinase receptors
Ligand- gated ion channel (5)
- response in milliseconds
- fast synaptic transmission
- ionotropic receptors (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Cl-)
- Nicotinic acethycholine (excitatory Na+), GABA type A (inhibitory Cl-)
- Agonist binds to extracellular receptor site
- Conformational changes happens and opening of the ion channel
- Allows ions to flow across the membrane
G- protein coupled receptor (3)
- response in seconds
- 7-pass transmembrane proteins that are coupled with G-proteins
- Targets for G-protein:
- Adenylyl cyclase –> cAMP formation
- Phospholipase C –> IP3 and DAG formation
- Ion channels –> calcium and potassium channels
- Rho A and Rho kinase –> many intracellular pathways
***look at the summary