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Click to edit Master title style
Click to edit Master text styles
Second level
Third level
Fourth level
Fifth level
Click to edit Master title style
Click to edit Master text styles
Second level
Third level
Fourth level
Fifth level
Click to edit Master text styles
Second level
Third level
Fourth level
Fifth level
Principles of Pharmacology and Toxicology (BIOL3020)
Section 4 Pharmacodynamics and Toxicology testing
Rang et al 2007 (Chapter 2)
The term receptor is often used loosely
The wrong definition any target molecule with which a drug molecule has to combine in order to elicit its specific effect
Can include
enzymes
carrier molecules
ion channels
Receptors.
P
Receptor-drug interactions
D
F
How do we determine affinity
Receptor
0 nmol/L
1
1.5
18
How do we determine affinity
A
XA
KA
50
KA
Drug A
Drug B
The Binding Capacity
Bmax
Affinity Revisited
Concentration (objects/field)
50
75
100
150
200
250
300
Amount Bound
10
20
30
35
35
35
Concentration (objects/field)
50
75
100
150
200
250
300
Amount Bound
10
20
30
35
Non-linear Regression is used to calculate KA and Bmax
Sigma Plot
The binding equation
The curve on right is represented by the equation
B Bmax.XA/(XA KA)
B amount of drug bound
XA concentration of drug
KA affinity
So if we make XA KA then
B Bmax/2
XA
KA
Drug binding kinetics
K 1
K-1
Affinity is related to the binding kinetics
How do we determine the effect of the drug
O
O
What is the difference between full and partial agonists
Differences in efficacy between chemically related agonists
These agonists act on the same receptors in a given biological system
full agonists can produce a maximal response
partial agonists can only produce a sub-maximal response
Competitive Antagonism
Agonist
Antagonist
Competitive antagonists compete with agonists for
the binding site
Example of Competitive Antagonism
Pr 0
Pr x1
Pr x2
Pr x3
Non-Competitive Antagonism
-
-
Non-Competitive Antagonism
GP
Extracellular
Intracellular
K
K
K
Agonist
Antagonist
Block
Receptor Desensitization
The measurement of ion
channel opening in
response to the agonist
glutamate
Other types of Receptor Desensitization
Receptors linked to second messengers (GPCRs) are often phosphorylated to become inactive
Extracellular
Intracellular
Chemical messenger/drug
Activation of downstream protein
Protein kinase
Other types of Receptor Desensitization
Down Regulation
Prolonged exposure to agonists often results in a gradual decrease in the number of receptors expressed on the cell surface
Removed by endocytosis
Receptor antagonist and physiological antagonism
Toxicology Testing
w
Dose (mg/kg body weight)
Increasing dose
Dose Response Function (LD50)
25
50
75
100
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Response
Categories of Toxicity
,
,
Agent LD50 (mg/kg)
Determining Hazard
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