180 likes | 191 Views
Presentation on. Agonist antagonist. Agonist:. Agonist is a drug or ligand that can bind or combine with with a receptor activates and the receptor. Example: 1.Apomorphine (Direct acting agonist) 2.Cocaine (Indirect acting agonist). Figure of Apomorphine and cocaine. Potency of agonist.
E N D
Presentation on Agonist antagonist www.AssignmentPoint.com
Agonist: Agonist is a drug or ligand that can bind or combine with with a receptor activates and the receptor. Example: 1.Apomorphine (Direct acting agonist) 2.Cocaine (Indirect acting agonist) www.AssignmentPoint.com
Figure of Apomorphine and cocaine www.AssignmentPoint.com
Potency of agonist • The potency of any agonist is inversely related to its Ec₅₀ value. (Ec₅₀ is term half maximize effective concentration of a drug refers to the concentration of a drug). www.AssignmentPoint.com
Types of agonist • Physiological agonist • Endogenous agonist • Super agonist • Full agonist • Partial agonist • Inverse agonist • Irreversible agonist www.AssignmentPoint.com
Definition of these types • Physiological agonist: It is a substance that creates the same bodily responses but does not bind the receptor. • Endogenous agonist: It is a compound naturally produced by the body that activates the receptor. • Super agonist: It is a compound that is capable of producing a greater maximal response than the endogenous agonist for the target receptor. www.AssignmentPoint.com
Definition of these types • Full agonist: It activates a receptor displaying full efficacy. • Partial agonist: It also bind and activate a given receptor at the receptor but have only partial efficacy at the receptor relative to a full agonist. • Inverse agonist: It is an agent that binds to the same receptor binding site as an antagonist for that receptor and reverses the constitutive activity of receptors. www.AssignmentPoint.com
Where does mechanism happen? www.AssignmentPoint.com
Mechanism www.AssignmentPoint.com An agonist is any drug that binds to receptor and activates the receptor. Oppositely antagonist is any drug that binds to a receptor and prevents the activation of the receptor.
Mechanism Competitive antagonist: A competitive antagonist is any pharmacologic antagonist that competes with the binding of agonist at the binding site. If we add more and more agonist eventually we can win the competition and reach maximum effect. www.AssignmentPoint.com
Mechanism Non competitive antagonist: It is any pharmacological antagonist that binds to a site on the receptor other than the agonist binding site. Then no matter how much agonist we add eventually we can not win the competition and reach maximal effect. www.AssignmentPoint.com
Antagonist The antagonist word has come from Greek. It means opponents, enemy. A pharmacological antagonist is any drug that binds to a receptor and prevents the activation of the receptor. www.AssignmentPoint.com
Example • Haloperidol (Direct acting antagonist) • alpha-methyl-para-tyrosin and reserpine (Indirect acting antagonist) www.AssignmentPoint.com
Figure of Haloperidol tablet www.AssignmentPoint.com
Types • Non competitive antagonist • Uncompetitive antagonist • Silent antagonist www.AssignmentPoint.com
Definition of these types • Non competitive antagonist: A noncompetitive antagonist is any pharmacologic antagonist that binds to a site on the receptor other than the agonist binding site www.AssignmentPoint.com
Definition of these types • Uncompetitive: Uncompetitive antagonist differs from noncompetitive antagonist is that they require receptor activation by an agonist before they can bind to a separate allostric binding site. • Silent antagonist: Silent antagonists are competitive receptor antagonists that have zero intrinsic activity for activating a receptor. www.AssignmentPoint.com
That`s All.... www.AssignmentPoint.com