Principles of Pharmacology Flashcards
Define pharmacodynamics
The effects of a DRUG on the body. This includes
- targets for drug action
- how drugs act at the target
- how the drug produces an action within a cell
Define pharmacokinetics
what the BODY does to a drug. This includes absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion
Why is the study of pharmacodynamics important?
It allows us to determine the appropriate dose range for patients and compare the effectiveness and safety of one drug to another
Why is the study of pharmacokinetics important?
It allowscis to design and optimise treatment regimens for individuals e.g. treatment duration & frequency of drug admission
What are the 2 methods of drug interactions with targets?
- Shape- this determines the binding abilities of the drug
2. Charge distribution- this determines the type of bonds that holds the drug to the target
List other factors that affect drug interactions with targets
- hydrophobicity
- ionisation of drug (pKa)
- confirmation of target
- stereochemistry of drug molecule
What are the main target proteins?
- Receptors: are the targets for endogenous transmitters e.g. hormones and neurotransmitters
- Ion channels: pores which span membranes to allow the selective passage of ions
- Enzymes: either inhibit or act as a false substrate
- Carriers: transport ions and smll organic molecules or inhibit transport
Which drugs act by virtue of their physio-chemical properties?
- Antidotes e.g. acetylcysteine to treat paracetamol overdose- simply to do with molecule shape
- Antacids e.g. aluminium hydroxide- neutralises acidic content of stomach
- Laxatives e.g. lactulose (osmotic laxative)
Differentiate between an agonist and antagonist
An agonist is a ligand that mimics the action of chemical messengers to elicit a cellular response , while an antagonist blocks the action of kf chemical messengers and thus the response
Give an example of an agonist and antagonist respectively
Histamine acts as an agonist at the H1 receptor in smooth muscle to increase blood flow
Terfenadine acts as an antagonist at the H1 receptor in smooth muscle to decrease local blood flow
Name the 4 receptor types which respond to drugs
- Ligand gated: channel linked receptors that require agonist to open channel e.g. nicotinic ACh
- Voltage gated: not linked to receptors, on steady require change in electrical charge across a membrane to open/close e.g. Na+
- G protein couple (metabotropic): largest family of receptors formed of a single polypetide chain and 7 transmembrane helices. Consists of alpha, beta and gamma subunits.
- Intracellular
a- Kinase linked: large extracellular ligand binding domain connected to Intracellular domain by single membrane spanning helix —> dimersation —> autophosphorylation
b- Nuclear receptors: family of 48 soluble receptors. Has class I- located in cytoplasm, forms homodimers, ligands are endocrine (sterioids, hormones) & class II- present in nucleus, forms heterodimers, ligand are lipids Binding to hormone response elements initiates gene transcription changes (+/-)
What are orthosteric sites?
The normal binding sites for endogenous products, turning processes on/off
What are functions of the alpha subunits?
Gs (stimulatory): activates adenylyl cyclase & Ca2+ channels
Gi (inhibitory): inhibits adenyl cyclase and actives K+ channels
Gg: activates phospholipase C
This plays an important role in adrenoreceptors as receptor type dictates the effect in the body
What are the 2 types of dose response curves (or concentration effect curve)?
- Graded: response of a particular system (INDIVIDUAL) e.g. tissue, animal or patient. Measured against [agonist]
- Quantal: drug doses, used to produce a specified response determined in each memeber of a population. Used for population based research usually
Base 10 logs are used for curves so there is a tenfold increase from one unit to the next
What do dose response curves allow?
- the estimation of emax which is used to deduce drug efficacy
- the estimation of concentration or dose required to produce 50% of maximal response (EC50/ED50) which can be used to work out drug potency