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Module 2 # 1 Pharmacodynamics. K ash Desai 966-2723 HSc A120 k.desai@usask.ca. Drug Receptors and Pharmacodynamics (how drugs work on the body). The action of a drug on the body , including receptor interactions, dose-response phenomena, and mechanisms of therapeutic and toxic action. 2.
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Module 2# 1Pharmacodynamics Kash Desai 966-2723 HSc A120 k.desai@usask.ca
Drug Receptors and Pharmacodynamics(how drugs work on the body) The action of a drug on the body, including receptor interactions, dose-response phenomena, and mechanisms of therapeutic and toxic action.
2 Pharmacodynamics (how drugs work on the body) • many drugs inhibit enzymes • Enzymes control a number of metabolic processes • A very common mode of action of many drugs • in the patient (ACE inhibitors) • in microbes (sulfas, penicillins) • in cancer cells (5-FU, 6-MP) • some drugs bind to: • proteins (in patient, or microbes) • the genome (cyclophosphamide) • microtubules (vincristine)
3 Pharmacodynamics • most drugs act (bind) on receptors • in or on cells • form tight bonds with the ligand • exacting requirements (size, shape, stereospecificity) • can be agonists (salbutamol), or antagonists (propranolol) • receptors have signal transduction methods
Drug Receptor • A macromolecular component of a cell with which a drug interacts to produce a response • Usually a protein
Types of Protein Receptors • Regulatory – change the activity of cellular enzymes • Enzymes – may be inhibited or activated • Transport – e.g. Na+ /K+ ATP’ase • Structural – these form cell parts
5 dose response curves k 1 [D] + [R] [DR] effect k -1 k1/k-1 = affinity const. k-1/k1 = dissociation const.(kd) at equilibrium: [D] x [R] x k1 = [DR] x k-1 so that: [DR] = k1 [D] [R] k-1 the lower the kd the more potent the drug
Drug - Receptor Binding D + R DR Complex Affinity – measure of propensity of a drug to bind receptor; the attractiveness of drug and receptor • Covalent bonds are stable and essentially irreversible • Electrostatic bonds may be strong or weak, but are usually reversible Affinity
Drug Receptor Interaction Efficacy (or Intrinsic Activity) – ability of a bound drug to change the receptor in a way that produces an effect; some drugs possess affinity but NOT efficacy Effect DR Complex
Drug-receptor interaction k1 Drug + Free Receptor Drug-receptor Complex D (100 - DR) DR k-1 Where: D = drug concentration DR= concentration of drug-receptor complex 100 - DR = free receptor concentration
Drug-receptor interaction • At equilibrium: [D] x [R] x k1 = [DR] x k-1 so that: [DR] = k1 [D] [R] k-1 k-1/k1 = dissociation constant (kd)
At equilibrium: [D] x [R] x k1 = [DR] x k-1 so that: [DR] = k1 [D] [R] k-1 k-1/k1 = dissociation constant (kd) What can we learn? • Ke (k1/k-1) is called the affinity constant • DR is the response; D is concentration of drug • when DR = 50 percent (effect is half maximal), D (or EC50) is equal to kd or the reciprocal of the affinity constant • response is a measure of efficacy • drugs that have parallel dose-response curves often have the same mechanism of action
% occupancy 6 dose response curves-2 effect = [DR] = Emax* [D]/([D]+EC50) Concept: spare receptors
Arithmetic Dose Scale • Rate of change is rapid at first and becomes progressively smaller as the dose is increased • Eventually, increments in dose produce no further change in effect i.e., maximal effect for that drug is obtained • Difficult to analyze mathematically
Log Dose Scale • transforms hyperbolic curve to a sigmoid (almost a straight line) • compresses dose scale • proportionate doses occur at equal intervals • straightens line • easier to analyze mathematically
Relative position of the dose-effect curve along the dose axis Has little clinical significance for a given therapeutic effect A more potent of two drugs is not clinically superior Low potency is a disadvantage only if the dose is so large that it is awkward to administer Potency
Relative Potency hydromorphone morphine codeine Analgesia aspirin Dose
7 Why are there spare receptors? • allow maximal response without total receptor occupancy – increase sensitivity of the system • spare receptors can bind (and internalize) extra ligand preventing an exaggerated response if too much ligand is present The receptor theory assumes that all receptors should be occupied to produce a maximal response. In that case at half maximal effect EC50=kd. Sometimes, full effect is seen at a fractional receptor occupation
10 Agonists and antagonists • agonist has affinity plus intrinsic activity • antagonist has affinity but no intrinsic activity • partial agonist has affinity and less intrinsic activity • competitive antagonists can be overcome
Agonist Drugs • drugs that interact with and activate receptors; they possess both affinity and efficacy • two types • Full – an agonist with maximal efficacy • Partial – an agonist with less then maximal efficacy
Agonist Dose Response Curves Full agonist Partial agonist Response Dose
Antagonist Drug • Antagonists interact with the receptor but do NOT change the receptor • they have affinity but NO efficacy • two types • Competitive • Noncompetitive
Competitive Antagonist • competes with agonist for receptor • surmountable with increasing agonist concentration • displaces agonist dose response curve to the right (dextral shift) • reduces the apparent affinity of the agonist i.e., increases 1/Ke
Noncompetitive Antagonist • drug binds to receptor and stays bound • irreversible – does not let go of receptor • produces slight dextral shift in the agonist DR curve in the low concentration range • this looks like competitive antagonist • but, as more and more receptors are bound (and essentially destroyed), the agonist drug becomes incapable of eliciting a maximal effect
11 Desensitization • agonists tend to desensitize receptors • homologous (decreased receptor number) • heterologous (decreased signal transduction) • antagonists tend to up regulate receptors
8 doseresponsecurves-3quantal dose response curves(used in populations, response is yes/no) Therapeutic index =Toxic Dose50/Effective Dose50 (TD50/ED50)
DR Curve: Whole Animal • Graded – response measured on a continuous scale • Quantal – response is an either/or event • relates dose and frequency of response in a population of individuals • often derived from frequency distribution of doses required to produce a specified effect
Effectiveness, toxicity, lethality • ED50 - Median Effective Dose 50; the dose at which 50 percent of the population or sample manifests a given effect; used with quantal dr curves • TD50 - Median Toxic Dose 50 - dose at which 50 percent of the population manifests a given toxic effect • LD50 - Median Toxic Dose 50 - dose which kills 50 percent of the subjects
Quantification of drug safety TD50 or LD50 Therapeutic Index = ED50
Drug A 100 sleep death Percent Responding 50 0 ED50 LD50 dose
Drug B 100 sleep death Percent Responding 50 0 ED50 LD50 dose
9 The therapeutic index • The higher theTI the better the drug. • TI’s vary from: 1.0 (some cancer drugs) to: >1000 (penicillin) • Drugs acting on the same receptor or enzyme system often have the same TI: (eg 50 mg of hydrochlorothiazide about the same as 2.5 mg of indapamide)
enzyme linked • (multiple actions) • ion channel linked • (speedy) • G protein linked • (amplifier) • nuclear (gene) linked • (long lasting) 4 Signal transduction
Structure: • Single polypeptide chain threaded back and forth resulting in 7 transmembrane å helices • There’s a G protein attached to the cytoplasmic side of the membrane (functions as a switch). 1. G protein-linked receptors
2. Tyrosine-kinase receptors • Structure: • Receptors exist as individual polypeptides • Each has an extracellular signal-binding site • An intracellular tail with a number of tyrosines and a single å helix spanning the membrane
3. Ion channel receptors • Structure: • Protein pores in the plasma membrane
Intracellular receptors Not all signal receptors are located on the plasma membrane. Some are proteins located in the cytoplasm or nucleus of target cells. • The signal molecule must be able to pass through plasma membrane. Examples: ~Nitric oxide (NO) ~Steroid (e.g., estradiol, progesterone, testosterone) and thyroid hormones of animals).
B. Second Messengers • Small, nonprotein, water-soluble molecules or ions • Readily spread throughout the cell by diffusion • Two most widely used second messengers are: • 1. Cycle AMP • 2. Calcium ions Ca2+
2. Calcium Ions (Ca2+) and Inositol Trisphosphate • Calcium more widely used than cAMP • used in neurotransmitters, growth factors, some hormones • Increases in Ca2+ causes many possible responses: • Muscle cell contraction • Secretion of certain substance • Cell division
Two benefits of a signal-transduction pathway • 1. Signal amplification • 2. Signal specificity • A. Signal amplification • Proteins persist in active form long enough to process numerous molecules of substrate • Each catalytic step activates more products then in the proceeding steps
12 Summary • most drugs act through receptors • there are 4 common signal transduction methods • the interaction between drug and receptor can be described mathematically and graphically • agonists have both affinity (kd) and intrinsic activity () • antagonists have affinity only • antagonists can be competitive (change kd) or • non-competitive (change ) when mixed with agonists • agonists desensitize receptors. • antagonists sensitize receptors.