100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Receptor pharmacology lectures

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
45
Uploaded on
22-10-2021
Written in
2019/2020

Receptor pharmacology

Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
October 22, 2021
Number of pages
45
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Receptor pharmacology
Section 1: general pharmacological principles
Lecture 1
Pharmacology: interaction of chemical substances with the human body.
Non-specific: biological effect at high drug concentration
Specific: effect with low drug concentration, chemical and biological specificity > act on target
proteins with high affinity to the drug.

Drugs act on target proteins:
- Receptors: target molecules whose function is to recognize and respond to specific signals
such as hormones, neurotransmitter and inflammatory mediators > cell communication.
Reciprocal specificity to receptor-drug interaction.
On target side effect = other molecules with the same receptor also get affected
Off target side effect = molecules with other receptors get affected.
- Ion channels
- Enzymes
- Carriers (e.g. cocaine)

Agonist (A): receptor occupation leads to biological response > A + R = AR > AR* > response
Antagonist (B): receptor occupation does not lead to response and prevents the effect of an agonist,
mostly by preventing it from binding.
N: receptor




Fractional occupancy
Ka = concentration of ligand to
which the receptor occupation is exactly 50% > steepest part of the curve.
Receptor binding measurement: Scat chard plot > relation between specific
vs non-specific binding > relation between concentration and binding >
steepness determines Ka (thus receptor occupation).

Efficacy = the extent to which a drug can affect the system (0-1)
Potency = amount of drug required to produce an effect of given intensity (high potency = low EC50)

Occupation theory: effect (Ea) proportional to the occupancy (Na) (over-simplification)




EC50 = concentration where the efficacy is half, no matter how efficient the drug is!
-Log of EC50 = pD2
Receptor reserve: more receptors than needed, so less concentration relative to the
receptor is needed to fully excite the system, theoretical occupancy and response
curves, EC50 < Ka (only for full agonist). {Occupancy both drugs} = {EC50 full} and
{EC50 partial} intersect.

,(Reversible) competitive antagonism:
- Bind to receptor with no reaction
- More antagonist > more agonist needed > specific curve!
- Dose ration: relation between antagonist with and without agonist
- Schild plot: dose ration curves, pA2 = -log Ka
- Irreversible = non-competitive, sometimes bind at other site than
agonist (allosteric) > agonist can bind but no activation, loss of efficacy!
Partial agonism/antagonism:
- Partial agonist = partial antagonist
- The more full agonist, the more the partial agonist becomes antagonist
- Can be very useful as a drug
Non-competitive-like antagonism:
- Dissociation is very low
- Binding is not irreversible, but very slow
- Behaves like a non-competitive antagonist

Binding constants can give you information about the selectivity of a drug.
Non-competitive antagonist don’t always induce loss of efficacy.


Lecture 2
08-05-2020
Lower binding constant > lower concentration needed > more selective.
Partial agonist: occupies all receptors but does not activate them/ the system fully.
Intrinsic activity = maximal effect*100%

Inverse agonism: the receptor is (a bit) in the activated state
when no agonist is present > baseline activity > inverse agonist
presence lowers the activity. Can be blocked by antagonist.
➔ 2 state model
Antagonist has no activity in the absence of an (inverse) agonist,
has no preference in affinity for receptor state.
80% of G-protein coupled receptor antagonists are inverse agonist!

,Physiological/functional antagonism:
- activate the receptor that has the opposite effect
- e.g. M2 and beta2 receptors in lungs or parietal cells
➔ High concentrations are harder to physiological antagonise

Chemical antagonism:
- Non-receptor antagonist
- E.g. antibodies, antacids, chelators
- Can take place in absence of physiological system

Pharmacokinetic antagonism:
- Increased rate of metabolic degradation/elimination of another drug
- Decreased g-I absorption
- E.g. warfarin long halve live > rifampicin > helps eliminate warfarin

Desensitization/tachyphylaxis/tolerance: loss of receptor response
- Loss/change in receptors
- Exhaustion of mediators
- Enhanced drug metabolism
- Compensatory physiological mechanisms
- Extrusion of drugs form cells (out pumping)


Purple = response
Green = response after wash
Red = number of receptor
Yellow = number of receptors




Uncoupling: ligand binding > GRK > phosphorylation >
uncoupling > arrestin > endocytosis > receptor
recycling/degredation/new receptor synthesis due to gene
expression.
➔ Rapid and delayed drug response!




Types of target for drug activation:
- Receptors
- Ion channels
- Enzymes
- Transporters

, Lecture 3
Receptor types:
- Ligand-gated ion channels: ligand binding dependent > hyper-
/depolarization, very fast, ACh/nicotinic
- G-protein coupled: ligand binding > opening ion channel / second
messengers, quite fast, muscarinic/ACh
- Kinase-linked: ligand binding > protein phosphorylation > gene
transcription > protein synthesis, quite slow, cytokine receptors
- Nuclear receptor: goes inside the cell > ligand binding > gene
transcription, very slow, oestrogen

Structure of receptor types:
- Ligand-gated: 4/5 channels, extracellular binding domain
- G-protein coupled: 7 channels, extracellular of membrane binding
domain
- Kinase linked: 1 channel, extracellular binding domain, intracellular
catalytic domain
- Nuclear: DNA binding domain


Ligand-gated ion channels:
Nicotinic ACh receptor:
- 5 subunits
- Nm (muscle) and Nn (neuronal) subtypes
- Increased Na+ and K+ permeability
- 2 binding domains (need to both be occupied)

GABA/NMDA receptors: ligand binding receptors for learning and memory

G-protein coupled receptors: for hormones, neurotransmitters, mediators, e.g.
- 7 membrane channels, extracellular and membrane binding domain, intracellular domain
- Muscarinic ACh receptors: M1/2/3/4/5
- Adrenoceptors: α1/2, β1/2/3

Protease-activated receptors (PARs): blood clothing
Cleavage by thrombin extracellular N-terminus > terminus becomes active and a tethered agonist >
phosphorylation of intracellular terminus > receptor is desensitised (irreversible).

‘Shuttle model’
GDP = inactive state
GTP = active state > β-λ complex splits from alpha subunit
βλ heads to target cell 2
Alpha heads to target cell 1 > GTP hydrolyses to GDP

Specificity alpha subunit, beta-gamma subunits for all
GPCRs.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
PharmacyHelp Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
25
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
13
Documents
25
Last sold
5 days ago
Pharmacy Help

5.0

2 reviews

5
2
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions