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Dr. Asmah Nasser
General Concepts
Drug Dose
Administration
Drug Effect
or Response
Pharmaceutical
Pharmacokinetics
Pharmacodynamics
Pharmacotherapeutics
Disintegration
of Drug
Absorption/distribution
metabolism/excretion
Drug/Receptor
Interaction
Introduction
Pharmacodynamics: Study of the biochemical and
physiologic effects of drugs and their mechanisms of
action.
Drug action
 The main ways by which drugs act are via interaction
with cell proteins, namely receptors, ion channels,
enzymes and transport/carrier proteins.
 In addition, drugs can work by themselves
mechanically or chemically.
 Its useful to know what are the basic principles of drug
action.
Principles of Drug action
 Stimulation: Enhancement of the level of a specific
biological activity (usually already ongoing physiological
process). E.g. adrenaline stimulates heart rate.
 Depression: Diminution of the level of a specific biological
activity (usually already ongoing physiological process).
E.g. barbiturate depress the CNS.
 Replacement: Replacement of the natural hormones or
enzymes (any substance) which are deficient in our body.
E.g. insulin for treating diabetes.
 Cytotoxic action: Toxic effects on invading micro organisms
or cancer cells.
How does all this happen?
 A drug can produce all the said effects by virtue of
any of the following action
1. Through enzymes: a drug can act by either
stimulating or inhibiting an enzyme
 Through receptors: this is when a drug produces
its response by attaching itself to a protein called
as receptor which in turn regulates the cell
function.
 Receptor action is the most commonest way of
producing action.
Continuation...
2. Physical action: The physical property is
responsible for drug action. E.g. radioisotope I131
and other radioisotopes.
3. Chemical action: The drug reacts extracellularly
according to simple chemical equations. E.g.
antacids neutralising the gastric acid.
4
A deeper look into the receptor
 The best-characterized drug receptors are regulatory
proteins, which mediate the actions of endogenous
chemical signals such as neurotransmitters and
hormones.
 This class of receptors mediates the effects of many of
the most useful therapeutic agents.
 Word “Receptor” is used as a loose term
Other Receptors
 Other classes of proteins that have been
identified as drug receptors include
1. Enzymes, which may be inhibited (or, less
commonly, activated) by binding a drug (eg,
dihydrofolate reductase, the receptor for the
antineoplastic drug methotrexate)
2. Transport proteins (eg, Na+/K+ ATPase, the
membrane receptor for cardioactive digitalis
glycosides)
3. Structural proteins (eg, tubulin)
Agonist & Antagonist
 When a drug binds to a receptor the following can
occur and based on this the drugs are classified.
 Agonist: when a drug binds to the receptor and
activates it to produce an effect
 Antagonist: when a drug binds to a receptor and
prevents the action of an agonist, but does not
have an action on its own.
Tricky
Other terms
 Inverse agonist: when a drug activates a receptor to
produce an effect in the opposite direction to that of
the agonist
 Partial agonist: when a drug binds to the receptor
and activates it but produces a submaximal effect
(by antagonising the full effect of the agonist)
Agonist & Inverse Agonist
Affinity & Intrinsic activity
 Affinity: It is the ability of a drug to bind to the
receptor (just bind)
 Intrinsic activity: It is the ability of a drug to activate a
receptor following receptor occupation.
Agonist
 Agonists are the chemicals that interact with a
receptor, thereby initiate a chemical reaction in the
cell and produces effect .
 Example—ACh is agonist at muscarinic receptor in
heart cell.
 Will have both Affinity and maximal Intrinsic
activity
So, what is a receptor “agonist”?
 Any drug that binds to a receptor and stimulates
the functional activities
 e.g.: Ach
Receptor
Acetylcholine
A Cell
Some Effect
Antagonist
 A drug that binds to the receptor and blocks the
effect of an agonist for that receptor
 Atropine is antagonist of ACh at Muscarinic
receptors.
 Will have only Affinity but no Intrinsic activity
So, what is a receptor
“antagonist”?
 Any drug that prevents the binding of an
agonist
 eg: Atropine (an anticholinergic drug)
Acetylcholine
Atropine
Dude, you’re
in my way!
Inverse agonist
 Inverse Agonists are the chemicals that interact with a
receptor, but produces opposite effect of the well
recognized agonist for that receptor
 Will have Affinity and negative Intrinsic activity
 Example: Flumazenil is an inverse agonist of
Benzodiazepine
Inverse agonist
 Any drug that binds to a receptor and produces
an opposite effect as that of an agonist
Receptor
Inverse agonist
A Cell
Effect opposite to
that of
the true agonist
Partial agonist
 Partial agonist activates receptor to produce an
effect. Less response than a full agonist .
 Partial agonist blocks the agonist action.
 Will have Affinity but sub maximal Intrinsic
activity
Partial agonist
 Produces a submaximal response
True agonist
Partial agonist
Oh!!!, I should
Have been here
Submaximal
effect
Types of Receptors
 Are they specific?
 usually, but not always
 Are there subtypes?
 sometimes …
 example:
 there are several types of epinephrine receptors
There can be several types of
receptors:
1 Receptors
in Heart
2 Receptors in
Bronchioles
Epinephrine
Examples of specialized receptors
Type Subtype Endogenous Ligand
LIGAND-GATED CHANNELS
Acetylcholine Nicotinic Acetylcholine
GABA A GABA
Glutamate NMDA, kainate, AMPA Glutamate or aspartate
G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORS
ACTH - ACTH
Acetylcholine Muscarinic Acetylcholine
Adrenergic α1, α2, β Epinephrine and norepinephrine
GABA B GABA
Opioid μ, κ, δ Enkephalins
Serotonin 5-HT1-7 5-HT
Dopamine D1-5 Dopamine
Adenosine A1, A2a, A2b, A3 Adenosine
Histamine H1, H2, H3, H4 Histamine
TYROSINE KINASE RECEPTORS
Insulin - Insulin
NGF - NGF
EGF - EGF
NUCLEAR HORMONE RECEPTORS
Estrogen α, β Estrogen
Glucocorticoid Type 1 Glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid
Type 2 Glucocorticoid
Androgens - Testosterone
A Problem
 Epinephrine is a non-specific drug: it is an agonist for
BOTH 1 and 2 receptors
Why might this be a problem for
someone with asthma and
hypertension?
A Solution
 More specific agonists have been developed:
 eg: terbutaline is a more specific 2 agonist that is
used for treating people with asthma
Major Concepts
 Drugs often work by binding to a “receptor”
 Receptors are found in the cell membrane, in the
cytoplasm, and in the nucleus
 Anything that binds to a receptor is a “ligand”
Drug-Receptor interaction
 In most cases, a drug (D) binds to a receptor (R) in a
reversible bimolecular reaction
 Antagonists can bind to the receptor and occupy its
binding site and, therefore, participate only in the first
equilibrium.
 Agonists, on the other hand, have the appropriate
structural features to force the bound receptor into an
active conformation (DR*).
 This conformational change leads to a series of events
causing a cellular response.
Assessment of Receptor Occupation
Measure of Affinity
 kd is a relative measure of affinity of a drug
for its receptor.
 It varies inversely with the affinity of the
drug for its receptor
 High-affinity drugs have lower kd values and
occupy a greater number of drug receptors
than drugs with lower affinities.
Drug-receptor interaction
 Generally the intensity of response increases with
dose
 The drug receptor interaction obeys the law of
mass action
Emax X [D]
KD+[D]
E=
Law of mass action
 E is observed effect at dose [D] of a drug
 Emax is the maximal response
 KD is the dissociation constant of a drug receptor
complex
 KD is usually equal to the dose of a drug at which half
maximal response is produced
Classification of receptors
 G-protein coupled receptors
 Ion channels
 Enzymatic receptors
 Intracellular receptors (regulates gene
expression)
Ion channels
 The cell surface enclose ion channels specific for
Ca2+, K+, or Na+
 These ion channels are controlled by the receptors
 E.g. Gs opens Ca2+ channels in the myocardium and
skeletal muscle and Gi opens the K+ channels in
heart
 Some receptors also modulate the ion channels
without the intervention of coupling proteins or
2nd messengers
 E.g. benzodiazepines modulating Cl- channels in
the brain
Ion channels
Dose Vs Response
 Increases in response until it reaches maximum, Later
it remains constant despite increase in dose .. Plateau
effect
DOSE RESPONSE CURVE
DOSE of drug
%
of
Response
After this point
increase in
dose doesn’t
increase the
response
Log dose response curve
 The dose response curve is a
rectangular hyperbola
 If the doses are plotted on a
logarithmic scale, the curve
becomes sigmoid
 A linear relationship
between log of dose and the
response can be seen
Efficacy and Potency
 Efficacy is the maximal response produced by a
drug
 It depends on the number of drug-receptor
complexes formed
 Potency is a measure of how much drug is required
to elicit a given response
 The lower the dose required to elicit given
response, the more potent the drug is
ED50
 It is the dose of the drug at which it gives 50% of the
maximal response
 A drug with low ED50 is more potent than a drug with
larger ED50
Log drug concentration
%
of
response
100%
50%
0%
10mg 20mg 30mg 40mg 50mg
75%
25%
200mg
Potency of Drug A >Drug B > Drug C
A B C
Efficacy and Potency
C
Potency
 Dose of a drug that required
to produce 50% of maximal
effect (ED 50)
 Relative
Positions of the DRC on x-
axis
 More left the DRC, more
potent the drug
Efficacy
 Maximum effect of the drug
 Height of the curve
on x-axis indicates the
efficacy of the drug
 Taller the DRC ,more
efficacious the drug
Probing question
 A 55-year-old woman with congestive heart failure is to
be treated with a diuretic drug. Drugs X and Y have the
same mechanism of diuretic action. Drug X in a dose of
5 mg produces the same magnitude of diuresis as 500
mg of drug Y. This suggests that
 Drug Y is less efficacious than drug X
 Drug X is about 100 times more potent than drug Y
 Toxicity of drug X is less than that of drug Y
 Drug X is a safer drug than drug Y
 Drug X will have a shorter duration of action than drug Y
because less of drug X is present for a given effect
Slope of DRC
 The slope of midportion of the DRC varies from drug
to drug
 A steep slope indicates small increase in dose produces
a large change in response
Drug Dose
Fall
in
BP
Hydralazine.. steep
Thiazides.. Flat
SLOPE
STEEP DRC
 Moderate increase in
dose leads to more
increase in response
 Dose needs
individualization for
different patients
 Unwanted and
Uncommon
FLAT DRC
 Moderate increase in dose
leads to little increase in
response
 Dose needs no
individualization for
different patients
 Desired and Common
Quantal dose response curves
 The quantal dose-effect curve is often
characterized by stating the median effective
dose (ED50), the dose at which 50% of individuals
exhibit the specified quantal effect.
 Similarly, the dose required to produce a particular
toxic effect in 50% of animals is called the median
toxic dose (TD50) If the toxic effect is death of the
animal, a median lethal dose (LD50) may be
experimentally defined
 Quantal dose-effect curves are used to generate
information regarding the margin of safety
(Therapeutic index)
Quantal DRC
Therapeutic index
Therapeutic index (TI)
 Lethal dose (LD50) is estimated only in preclinical
animal studies
 LD50 is not calculated in humans-OFCOURSE
 So we use the term “safety margin” of a drug or
“therapeutic window”
Therapeutic window
 It is a more clinically relevant index of safety
 It describes the dosage range between the
minimum effective therapeutic concentration or
dose, and the minimum toxic concentration or
dose
 E.g. theophylline has an average minimum plasma
conc of 8 mg/L and the toxic effects are observed
at 18 mg/L
 The therapeutic window is 8 – 18 mg/L
Therapeutic range
EFFECT
8 mg/L 18mg/L
8-18mg/L
Clinical significance
 Drugs with a low TI should be used with caution
and needs a periodic monitoring (less safe)
 E.g. warfarin, digoxin, theophylline
 Drugs with a large TI can be used relatively safely
and does not need close monitoring (highly safe)
 E.g. penicillin, paracetamol
 Other terms used: wide safety margin, narrow
safety margin
Synergism and antagonism
 When two drugs are given together or in quick
succession 3 things can happen:
1. Nothing (indifferent to each other)
2. Action of one drug is facilitated by the other
(synergism)
3. Action of one drug may decrease or inhibit the
action of other drug (antagonism)
Synergism
 Two types:
1. Additive effect: the effect of two drugs are in the
same direction and simply add up.
 Effect of drug A + B = effect of drug A and B
2. Supraadditive effect (potentiation): the effect of
combination is greater than the individual effect
of the components.
 Effect of drug A + B > effect of drug A + effect of
drug B
Antagonism
 Different types of antagonism
1. Physical: based on physical property of a drug.
 E.g. activated charcoal adsorbs alkaloids and
prevents their absorption (in alkaloid poisoning)
2. Chemical: based on chemical properties
resulting in an inactive product.
 E.g. chelating agents complex metals (used in
heavy metal poisoning)
Contd..
3. Physiological antagonism: two drugs act on
different receptors or by different mechanisms,
but have opposite effects
 E.g. histamine and adrenaline on bronchial
smooth muscle and BP
 E.g. several catabolic actions of the
glucocorticoid hormones lead to increased
blood sugar, an effect that is physiologically
opposed by insulin.
4. Receptor antagonism
Receptor antagonism
 This when an antagonist interferes with the
binding of the agonist with its receptor and
inhibits the generation of a response
 Receptor antagonism is specific
 E.g. an anticholinergic will decrease the spasm of
intestine induced by cholinergic agonists but not
the one induced by histamine
 Receptor antagonism can be competitive and
noncompetitive
Competitive antagonism
 Competitive ---
Surmountable
 Competes with agonist in
reversible fashion for
same receptor site
 Necessary to have higher
concentration of agonist to
achieve same response
Competitive agonist
Noncompetitive antagonism
 Noncompetitve ---
Insurmountable
 Antagonist binds to a site
different to that of an
agonist
 No matter how much
agonist -- antagonism
cannot be overcome
Competitive Vs Noncompetitive
Antagonism
 COMPETITIVE
 Antagonist binds with
same receptor
 Chemical resemblance
with agonist
 Parallel rightward shift of
DRC
 Apparently reduces
potency of agonist
 Intensity of response
depends both on
antagonist and agonist
concentration
 Eg: Acetylcholine and
Atropine
 NONCOMPETITIVE
 Another site of receptor
binding
 Does not resemble
 Flattening of DRC
 Apparently reduces efficacy of
agonist
 Intensity of response depends
mainly on antagonist
concentration
 Eg: phenoxybenzamine (for
pheochromocytoma)
Receptor Numbers and Responses
 The NUMBER and AFFINITY of receptors may change
 An increase in receptor number is called
UPREGULATION
 A decrease in receptor number is called
DOWNREGULATION
Upregulation of Receptors
 Upregulation: An increase in
the number of receptors on the
surface of target cells, making
the cells more sensitive to a
hormone or another agent.
 For example, there is an increase
in uterine oxytocin receptors in
the third trimester of pregnancy,
promoting the contraction of
the smooth muscle of the uterus
Downregulation of Receptors
 Eg: Downregulation:
 prolonged use of propranolol can
DECREASE the number of 1
receptors
 Prolonged & frequent use of short
acting 2 receptor agonists
decrease the number of 2
receptors
 Clinical relevance:
 A patient’s response to drug
therapy may change over time
Rats!
Where did they
all go?!?
Tolerance
 Gradual reduction in response to drugs is called
as tolerance
 Requirement of higher dose to produce a given
response
 It occurs over a period of time
 E.g. tolerance to sedative-hypnotics
 Many reasons for tolerance
1. Pharmacokinetic reasons-chronic use leads to
enhanced clearance-less effective concentration
2. Pharmacodynamic reasons (reduced number
and/or affinity of the receptors to the drugs)-
downregulation
Tachyphylaxis
 Rapid desensitization to a
drug produced by
inoculation with a series
of small frequent doses.
 A rapidly decreasing
response to a drug
following its initial
administration
 E.g. ephedrine, tyramine,
nicotine.
Spare receptors
 In some cases, the response elicited by a drug is
proportional to the fraction of receptors occupied
 More commonly, a maximal response can be
achieved when only a small fraction of receptors
are occupied by an agonist
 Receptors are said to be spare when maximal
response can be elicited by an agonist at a conc.
that does not result in occupancy of the full
complement of available receptors
 No qualitative difference form non spare
receptors
Graphical representation of a spare receptor
(refer to notes section below for explanation)
Spare receptors, KD and EC50
 KD is the concentration of the agonist at which
50% of the receptors are occupied
 If the number of receptors increase many fold
(spare receptors) THEN:
 A much lower concentration of agonist is sufficient
to produce 50% of maximal response (EC50)
 Occupation of spare receptors is determined by
comparing the EC50 with Kd
 If EC50 is less than Kd, spare receptors are said
to exist
Factors affecting Drug Action
 It is a rule rather than an exception that there is a
large variation in the drug response for the same
dose in different individuals.
 Pharmacokinetic handling of the drug
 Number or state of receptors
 Variations in neurogenic/hormonal tone
Contd..
Body Size/Wt.
 The average adult dose refers to individuals of
medium built
 For exceptionally obese and lean and for children
the dosage should be calculated based on body wt.
 Individual Dose = BW (Kg)/70 x average adult dose
 Dosage calculation based on surface area more
appropriate for children
Contd..
Age
 Extreme care has to be taken while administering
drugs to children and elderly
 Drug metabolizing enzymes are very poor and in case
of elderly they might have some other diseases
 Reduced doses are ideal for these age groups.
Contd..
Genetics
 Deficiency of some enzymes may lead to drug toxicity
because of poor or absence of metabolism
Route of drug administration
 IV route has quicker and prominent action when
compared to oral route
Psychological role is also a major determinant of drug
effect
Contd..
Pathological states
 Any underlying pathology may alter the drug response
 Special care is taken if the patient has renal or hepatic
impairment as the drugs are not eliminated and it may
lead to severe drug toxicity.
 Alzheimer’s disease – memory loss- failure to take
medications
Contd..
Co-administration of other drugs
 One drug may affect the drug action of others, it
may be useful or it may be harmful.
 Drug interactions play a very important part of
therapeutics.
Diet & environmental factors too play a important
role in deciding the drug action.
Things to know
 In pharmacodynamics you SHOULD know by now:
1. Principles of drug action
2. Agonist & its types
3. Antagonist and its types (on DRC)
4. Spare receptors
5. Affinity-intrinsic activity
6. Potency-efficacy (explain with DRC)
7. Therapeutic index and its calculation
8. Classification of receptors
9. G-protein coupled receptors
10. Second messenger concept (role of cAMP and IP3 &
DAG)
11. Downregulation & upregulation of receptors
Practice Question
 When tested under identical conditions with all
statistical requirements rigidly applied, drug X has the
following parameters: LD50=0.5 mg/Kg
Ed50=0.5 µg/Kg. The therapetic index is
1. 0.001
2. 0.1
3. 1.0
4. 10
5. 1000
Practice Question
 In the absence of other drugs, pindolol causes an
increase in heart rate by activating beta adrenoceptors.
In the presence of highly effective beta stimulants,
however, pindolol causes a dose-dependent, reversible
decrease in heart rate. Therefore, pindolol is probably
 An irreversible antagonist
 A physiologic antagonist
 A chemical antagonist
 A partial agonist
 A spare receptor agonist
Practice question
Which line is most efficacious?
Which is more potent?

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Pharmacodynamics.ppt

  • 2. General Concepts Drug Dose Administration Drug Effect or Response Pharmaceutical Pharmacokinetics Pharmacodynamics Pharmacotherapeutics Disintegration of Drug Absorption/distribution metabolism/excretion Drug/Receptor Interaction
  • 3. Introduction Pharmacodynamics: Study of the biochemical and physiologic effects of drugs and their mechanisms of action.
  • 4. Drug action  The main ways by which drugs act are via interaction with cell proteins, namely receptors, ion channels, enzymes and transport/carrier proteins.  In addition, drugs can work by themselves mechanically or chemically.  Its useful to know what are the basic principles of drug action.
  • 5. Principles of Drug action  Stimulation: Enhancement of the level of a specific biological activity (usually already ongoing physiological process). E.g. adrenaline stimulates heart rate.  Depression: Diminution of the level of a specific biological activity (usually already ongoing physiological process). E.g. barbiturate depress the CNS.  Replacement: Replacement of the natural hormones or enzymes (any substance) which are deficient in our body. E.g. insulin for treating diabetes.  Cytotoxic action: Toxic effects on invading micro organisms or cancer cells.
  • 6. How does all this happen?  A drug can produce all the said effects by virtue of any of the following action 1. Through enzymes: a drug can act by either stimulating or inhibiting an enzyme  Through receptors: this is when a drug produces its response by attaching itself to a protein called as receptor which in turn regulates the cell function.  Receptor action is the most commonest way of producing action.
  • 7. Continuation... 2. Physical action: The physical property is responsible for drug action. E.g. radioisotope I131 and other radioisotopes. 3. Chemical action: The drug reacts extracellularly according to simple chemical equations. E.g. antacids neutralising the gastric acid. 4
  • 8. A deeper look into the receptor  The best-characterized drug receptors are regulatory proteins, which mediate the actions of endogenous chemical signals such as neurotransmitters and hormones.  This class of receptors mediates the effects of many of the most useful therapeutic agents.  Word “Receptor” is used as a loose term
  • 9. Other Receptors  Other classes of proteins that have been identified as drug receptors include 1. Enzymes, which may be inhibited (or, less commonly, activated) by binding a drug (eg, dihydrofolate reductase, the receptor for the antineoplastic drug methotrexate) 2. Transport proteins (eg, Na+/K+ ATPase, the membrane receptor for cardioactive digitalis glycosides) 3. Structural proteins (eg, tubulin)
  • 10. Agonist & Antagonist  When a drug binds to a receptor the following can occur and based on this the drugs are classified.  Agonist: when a drug binds to the receptor and activates it to produce an effect  Antagonist: when a drug binds to a receptor and prevents the action of an agonist, but does not have an action on its own. Tricky
  • 11. Other terms  Inverse agonist: when a drug activates a receptor to produce an effect in the opposite direction to that of the agonist  Partial agonist: when a drug binds to the receptor and activates it but produces a submaximal effect (by antagonising the full effect of the agonist)
  • 12. Agonist & Inverse Agonist
  • 13. Affinity & Intrinsic activity  Affinity: It is the ability of a drug to bind to the receptor (just bind)  Intrinsic activity: It is the ability of a drug to activate a receptor following receptor occupation.
  • 14.
  • 15. Agonist  Agonists are the chemicals that interact with a receptor, thereby initiate a chemical reaction in the cell and produces effect .  Example—ACh is agonist at muscarinic receptor in heart cell.  Will have both Affinity and maximal Intrinsic activity
  • 16. So, what is a receptor “agonist”?  Any drug that binds to a receptor and stimulates the functional activities  e.g.: Ach Receptor Acetylcholine A Cell Some Effect
  • 17. Antagonist  A drug that binds to the receptor and blocks the effect of an agonist for that receptor  Atropine is antagonist of ACh at Muscarinic receptors.  Will have only Affinity but no Intrinsic activity
  • 18. So, what is a receptor “antagonist”?  Any drug that prevents the binding of an agonist  eg: Atropine (an anticholinergic drug) Acetylcholine Atropine Dude, you’re in my way!
  • 19. Inverse agonist  Inverse Agonists are the chemicals that interact with a receptor, but produces opposite effect of the well recognized agonist for that receptor  Will have Affinity and negative Intrinsic activity  Example: Flumazenil is an inverse agonist of Benzodiazepine
  • 20. Inverse agonist  Any drug that binds to a receptor and produces an opposite effect as that of an agonist Receptor Inverse agonist A Cell Effect opposite to that of the true agonist
  • 21. Partial agonist  Partial agonist activates receptor to produce an effect. Less response than a full agonist .  Partial agonist blocks the agonist action.  Will have Affinity but sub maximal Intrinsic activity
  • 22. Partial agonist  Produces a submaximal response True agonist Partial agonist Oh!!!, I should Have been here Submaximal effect
  • 23. Types of Receptors  Are they specific?  usually, but not always  Are there subtypes?  sometimes …  example:  there are several types of epinephrine receptors
  • 24. There can be several types of receptors: 1 Receptors in Heart 2 Receptors in Bronchioles Epinephrine
  • 25. Examples of specialized receptors Type Subtype Endogenous Ligand LIGAND-GATED CHANNELS Acetylcholine Nicotinic Acetylcholine GABA A GABA Glutamate NMDA, kainate, AMPA Glutamate or aspartate G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORS ACTH - ACTH Acetylcholine Muscarinic Acetylcholine Adrenergic α1, α2, β Epinephrine and norepinephrine GABA B GABA Opioid μ, κ, δ Enkephalins Serotonin 5-HT1-7 5-HT Dopamine D1-5 Dopamine Adenosine A1, A2a, A2b, A3 Adenosine Histamine H1, H2, H3, H4 Histamine TYROSINE KINASE RECEPTORS Insulin - Insulin NGF - NGF EGF - EGF NUCLEAR HORMONE RECEPTORS Estrogen α, β Estrogen Glucocorticoid Type 1 Glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid Type 2 Glucocorticoid Androgens - Testosterone
  • 26. A Problem  Epinephrine is a non-specific drug: it is an agonist for BOTH 1 and 2 receptors Why might this be a problem for someone with asthma and hypertension?
  • 27. A Solution  More specific agonists have been developed:  eg: terbutaline is a more specific 2 agonist that is used for treating people with asthma
  • 28. Major Concepts  Drugs often work by binding to a “receptor”  Receptors are found in the cell membrane, in the cytoplasm, and in the nucleus  Anything that binds to a receptor is a “ligand”
  • 29. Drug-Receptor interaction  In most cases, a drug (D) binds to a receptor (R) in a reversible bimolecular reaction  Antagonists can bind to the receptor and occupy its binding site and, therefore, participate only in the first equilibrium.  Agonists, on the other hand, have the appropriate structural features to force the bound receptor into an active conformation (DR*).  This conformational change leads to a series of events causing a cellular response.
  • 30. Assessment of Receptor Occupation Measure of Affinity  kd is a relative measure of affinity of a drug for its receptor.  It varies inversely with the affinity of the drug for its receptor  High-affinity drugs have lower kd values and occupy a greater number of drug receptors than drugs with lower affinities.
  • 31. Drug-receptor interaction  Generally the intensity of response increases with dose  The drug receptor interaction obeys the law of mass action Emax X [D] KD+[D] E=
  • 32. Law of mass action  E is observed effect at dose [D] of a drug  Emax is the maximal response  KD is the dissociation constant of a drug receptor complex  KD is usually equal to the dose of a drug at which half maximal response is produced
  • 33. Classification of receptors  G-protein coupled receptors  Ion channels  Enzymatic receptors  Intracellular receptors (regulates gene expression)
  • 34. Ion channels  The cell surface enclose ion channels specific for Ca2+, K+, or Na+  These ion channels are controlled by the receptors  E.g. Gs opens Ca2+ channels in the myocardium and skeletal muscle and Gi opens the K+ channels in heart  Some receptors also modulate the ion channels without the intervention of coupling proteins or 2nd messengers  E.g. benzodiazepines modulating Cl- channels in the brain
  • 36.
  • 37. Dose Vs Response  Increases in response until it reaches maximum, Later it remains constant despite increase in dose .. Plateau effect
  • 38. DOSE RESPONSE CURVE DOSE of drug % of Response After this point increase in dose doesn’t increase the response
  • 39. Log dose response curve  The dose response curve is a rectangular hyperbola  If the doses are plotted on a logarithmic scale, the curve becomes sigmoid  A linear relationship between log of dose and the response can be seen
  • 40. Efficacy and Potency  Efficacy is the maximal response produced by a drug  It depends on the number of drug-receptor complexes formed  Potency is a measure of how much drug is required to elicit a given response  The lower the dose required to elicit given response, the more potent the drug is
  • 41. ED50  It is the dose of the drug at which it gives 50% of the maximal response  A drug with low ED50 is more potent than a drug with larger ED50
  • 42. Log drug concentration % of response 100% 50% 0% 10mg 20mg 30mg 40mg 50mg 75% 25% 200mg Potency of Drug A >Drug B > Drug C A B C
  • 44. Potency  Dose of a drug that required to produce 50% of maximal effect (ED 50)  Relative Positions of the DRC on x- axis  More left the DRC, more potent the drug Efficacy  Maximum effect of the drug  Height of the curve on x-axis indicates the efficacy of the drug  Taller the DRC ,more efficacious the drug
  • 45. Probing question  A 55-year-old woman with congestive heart failure is to be treated with a diuretic drug. Drugs X and Y have the same mechanism of diuretic action. Drug X in a dose of 5 mg produces the same magnitude of diuresis as 500 mg of drug Y. This suggests that  Drug Y is less efficacious than drug X  Drug X is about 100 times more potent than drug Y  Toxicity of drug X is less than that of drug Y  Drug X is a safer drug than drug Y  Drug X will have a shorter duration of action than drug Y because less of drug X is present for a given effect
  • 46. Slope of DRC  The slope of midportion of the DRC varies from drug to drug  A steep slope indicates small increase in dose produces a large change in response
  • 48. SLOPE STEEP DRC  Moderate increase in dose leads to more increase in response  Dose needs individualization for different patients  Unwanted and Uncommon FLAT DRC  Moderate increase in dose leads to little increase in response  Dose needs no individualization for different patients  Desired and Common
  • 49. Quantal dose response curves  The quantal dose-effect curve is often characterized by stating the median effective dose (ED50), the dose at which 50% of individuals exhibit the specified quantal effect.  Similarly, the dose required to produce a particular toxic effect in 50% of animals is called the median toxic dose (TD50) If the toxic effect is death of the animal, a median lethal dose (LD50) may be experimentally defined  Quantal dose-effect curves are used to generate information regarding the margin of safety (Therapeutic index)
  • 52. Therapeutic index (TI)  Lethal dose (LD50) is estimated only in preclinical animal studies  LD50 is not calculated in humans-OFCOURSE  So we use the term “safety margin” of a drug or “therapeutic window”
  • 53. Therapeutic window  It is a more clinically relevant index of safety  It describes the dosage range between the minimum effective therapeutic concentration or dose, and the minimum toxic concentration or dose  E.g. theophylline has an average minimum plasma conc of 8 mg/L and the toxic effects are observed at 18 mg/L  The therapeutic window is 8 – 18 mg/L
  • 55. Clinical significance  Drugs with a low TI should be used with caution and needs a periodic monitoring (less safe)  E.g. warfarin, digoxin, theophylline  Drugs with a large TI can be used relatively safely and does not need close monitoring (highly safe)  E.g. penicillin, paracetamol  Other terms used: wide safety margin, narrow safety margin
  • 56.
  • 57. Synergism and antagonism  When two drugs are given together or in quick succession 3 things can happen: 1. Nothing (indifferent to each other) 2. Action of one drug is facilitated by the other (synergism) 3. Action of one drug may decrease or inhibit the action of other drug (antagonism)
  • 58. Synergism  Two types: 1. Additive effect: the effect of two drugs are in the same direction and simply add up.  Effect of drug A + B = effect of drug A and B 2. Supraadditive effect (potentiation): the effect of combination is greater than the individual effect of the components.  Effect of drug A + B > effect of drug A + effect of drug B
  • 59. Antagonism  Different types of antagonism 1. Physical: based on physical property of a drug.  E.g. activated charcoal adsorbs alkaloids and prevents their absorption (in alkaloid poisoning) 2. Chemical: based on chemical properties resulting in an inactive product.  E.g. chelating agents complex metals (used in heavy metal poisoning)
  • 60. Contd.. 3. Physiological antagonism: two drugs act on different receptors or by different mechanisms, but have opposite effects  E.g. histamine and adrenaline on bronchial smooth muscle and BP  E.g. several catabolic actions of the glucocorticoid hormones lead to increased blood sugar, an effect that is physiologically opposed by insulin. 4. Receptor antagonism
  • 61. Receptor antagonism  This when an antagonist interferes with the binding of the agonist with its receptor and inhibits the generation of a response  Receptor antagonism is specific  E.g. an anticholinergic will decrease the spasm of intestine induced by cholinergic agonists but not the one induced by histamine  Receptor antagonism can be competitive and noncompetitive
  • 62. Competitive antagonism  Competitive --- Surmountable  Competes with agonist in reversible fashion for same receptor site  Necessary to have higher concentration of agonist to achieve same response
  • 64. Noncompetitive antagonism  Noncompetitve --- Insurmountable  Antagonist binds to a site different to that of an agonist  No matter how much agonist -- antagonism cannot be overcome
  • 65. Competitive Vs Noncompetitive Antagonism  COMPETITIVE  Antagonist binds with same receptor  Chemical resemblance with agonist  Parallel rightward shift of DRC  Apparently reduces potency of agonist  Intensity of response depends both on antagonist and agonist concentration  Eg: Acetylcholine and Atropine  NONCOMPETITIVE  Another site of receptor binding  Does not resemble  Flattening of DRC  Apparently reduces efficacy of agonist  Intensity of response depends mainly on antagonist concentration  Eg: phenoxybenzamine (for pheochromocytoma)
  • 66. Receptor Numbers and Responses  The NUMBER and AFFINITY of receptors may change  An increase in receptor number is called UPREGULATION  A decrease in receptor number is called DOWNREGULATION
  • 67. Upregulation of Receptors  Upregulation: An increase in the number of receptors on the surface of target cells, making the cells more sensitive to a hormone or another agent.  For example, there is an increase in uterine oxytocin receptors in the third trimester of pregnancy, promoting the contraction of the smooth muscle of the uterus
  • 68. Downregulation of Receptors  Eg: Downregulation:  prolonged use of propranolol can DECREASE the number of 1 receptors  Prolonged & frequent use of short acting 2 receptor agonists decrease the number of 2 receptors  Clinical relevance:  A patient’s response to drug therapy may change over time Rats! Where did they all go?!?
  • 69.
  • 70. Tolerance  Gradual reduction in response to drugs is called as tolerance  Requirement of higher dose to produce a given response  It occurs over a period of time  E.g. tolerance to sedative-hypnotics  Many reasons for tolerance 1. Pharmacokinetic reasons-chronic use leads to enhanced clearance-less effective concentration 2. Pharmacodynamic reasons (reduced number and/or affinity of the receptors to the drugs)- downregulation
  • 71. Tachyphylaxis  Rapid desensitization to a drug produced by inoculation with a series of small frequent doses.  A rapidly decreasing response to a drug following its initial administration  E.g. ephedrine, tyramine, nicotine.
  • 72. Spare receptors  In some cases, the response elicited by a drug is proportional to the fraction of receptors occupied  More commonly, a maximal response can be achieved when only a small fraction of receptors are occupied by an agonist  Receptors are said to be spare when maximal response can be elicited by an agonist at a conc. that does not result in occupancy of the full complement of available receptors  No qualitative difference form non spare receptors
  • 73. Graphical representation of a spare receptor (refer to notes section below for explanation)
  • 74. Spare receptors, KD and EC50  KD is the concentration of the agonist at which 50% of the receptors are occupied  If the number of receptors increase many fold (spare receptors) THEN:  A much lower concentration of agonist is sufficient to produce 50% of maximal response (EC50)  Occupation of spare receptors is determined by comparing the EC50 with Kd  If EC50 is less than Kd, spare receptors are said to exist
  • 75. Factors affecting Drug Action  It is a rule rather than an exception that there is a large variation in the drug response for the same dose in different individuals.  Pharmacokinetic handling of the drug  Number or state of receptors  Variations in neurogenic/hormonal tone
  • 76. Contd.. Body Size/Wt.  The average adult dose refers to individuals of medium built  For exceptionally obese and lean and for children the dosage should be calculated based on body wt.  Individual Dose = BW (Kg)/70 x average adult dose  Dosage calculation based on surface area more appropriate for children
  • 77. Contd.. Age  Extreme care has to be taken while administering drugs to children and elderly  Drug metabolizing enzymes are very poor and in case of elderly they might have some other diseases  Reduced doses are ideal for these age groups.
  • 78. Contd.. Genetics  Deficiency of some enzymes may lead to drug toxicity because of poor or absence of metabolism Route of drug administration  IV route has quicker and prominent action when compared to oral route Psychological role is also a major determinant of drug effect
  • 79. Contd.. Pathological states  Any underlying pathology may alter the drug response  Special care is taken if the patient has renal or hepatic impairment as the drugs are not eliminated and it may lead to severe drug toxicity.  Alzheimer’s disease – memory loss- failure to take medications
  • 80. Contd.. Co-administration of other drugs  One drug may affect the drug action of others, it may be useful or it may be harmful.  Drug interactions play a very important part of therapeutics. Diet & environmental factors too play a important role in deciding the drug action.
  • 81. Things to know  In pharmacodynamics you SHOULD know by now: 1. Principles of drug action 2. Agonist & its types 3. Antagonist and its types (on DRC) 4. Spare receptors 5. Affinity-intrinsic activity 6. Potency-efficacy (explain with DRC) 7. Therapeutic index and its calculation 8. Classification of receptors 9. G-protein coupled receptors 10. Second messenger concept (role of cAMP and IP3 & DAG) 11. Downregulation & upregulation of receptors
  • 82. Practice Question  When tested under identical conditions with all statistical requirements rigidly applied, drug X has the following parameters: LD50=0.5 mg/Kg Ed50=0.5 µg/Kg. The therapetic index is 1. 0.001 2. 0.1 3. 1.0 4. 10 5. 1000
  • 83. Practice Question  In the absence of other drugs, pindolol causes an increase in heart rate by activating beta adrenoceptors. In the presence of highly effective beta stimulants, however, pindolol causes a dose-dependent, reversible decrease in heart rate. Therefore, pindolol is probably  An irreversible antagonist  A physiologic antagonist  A chemical antagonist  A partial agonist  A spare receptor agonist
  • 84. Practice question Which line is most efficacious? Which is more potent?