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DRUG RECEPTOR INTERACTIONS

INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY
Leader in continuing dental education
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Law of Mass Action
When a drug (D) combines with a receptor (R), it
does so at a rate which is dependent on the
concentration of the drug and the concentration of the
receptor.
[D] + [R]

D = drug
R = receptor,
DR = drug-receptor complex
k1 = rate for association and
k2 = rate for dissociation.
KD = Dissociation Constant
KA = Association Constant

k2

=

k1
 [DR]
k2

KD =

k1
1

[D][R]
[DR]

=

KA =

KD

www.indiandentalacademy.com

k1
k2

Read the Appendix at the back

=

[DR]
[D] [R]
Drug-Receptor Complex

DR

SATURATION CURVE

[Drug] nM

Log [Drug]
www.indiandentalacademy.com
SATURATION CURVE
[DR] max

[DR]

RT = Bmax

k2

=

KD = [D][R]

k1

[Drug] nM

RT = Total number of receptors
www.indiandentalacademy.com

Bmax = Maximal number of receptors Bound

[DR]
TIME COURSE
[D] + [R] = [DR]

[DR]

Equilibrium

k2

=

KD

k1

0

10

= [D][R]
[DR]

20

30

40

Time (min)

KD = Equilibrium Dissociation Constant
www.indiandentalacademy.com

50

60
[DR]

SATURATION CURVE

KD

[Drug] nM

At equilibrium, the dissociation constant is KD and the affinity is K A = 1/KD
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Thus when [D] = KD , half the total number of receptors will be occupied.
Agonists and Antagonists
AGONIST
• A drug is said to be an agonist when it binds to a receptor
and causes a response or effect.
It has intrinsic activity = 1

+++

++-

---

---

+--

+++

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Depolarization
Agonists and Antagonists
ANTAGONIST
• A drug is said to be an antagonist when it binds to a
receptor and prevents (blocks or inhibits) a natural
compound or a drug to have an effect on the receptor. An
antagonist has NO activity.
Its intrinsic activity is = 0

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
PHARMACOLOGICAL ANTAGONISTS
1.

Competitive
They compete for the binding site
•
•

2.

Reversible
Irreversible

Non-competitve
Bind elsewhere in the receptor (Channel Blockers).

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
FUNCTIONAL ANTAGONISTS
1. Physiologic Antagonists
2. Chemical Antagonist

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Agonists and Antagonists
Physiologic ANTAGONIST
• A drug that binds to a non-related receptor, producing an
effect opposite to that produced by the drug of interest.
• Its intrinsic activity is = 1, but on another receptor.
Glucocorticoid Hormones

 Blood Sugar

Insulin

 Blood Sugar

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Agonists and Antagonists
Chemical ANTAGONIST
• A chelator (sequester) of similar agent that interacts
directly with the drug being antagonized to remove it or
prevent it from binding its receptor.
• A chemical antagonist does not depend on interaction with
the agonist’s receptor (although such interaction may
occur).
Heparin, an anticoagulant, acidic
If there is too much  bleeding and haemorrhaging
Protamine sulfate is a base. It forms a stable
inactive complex www.indiandentalacademy.com
with heparin and inactivates it.
Competition Binding

IC50
Log [I] nM

Binding of Drug D www.indiandentalacademy.com
I = Competitor
Competition Binding
Four drugs

A

B

C

D

IC50
Log [I] nM

RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Effect or
Response

SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE

Drug Concentration
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SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE

Effect or
Response

Maximal Effect

50% Effect

ED50

Drug Concentration
www.indiandentalacademy.com
SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE

EFFECT

Maximal Effect

EFFICACY
POTENCY

ED50

Log [Dose]
www.indiandentalacademy.com
SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE
B

C

EFFECT

A

Log [Dose]

RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D
www.indiandentalacademy.com

D
SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE
A

RESPONSE

B

C
D
ED50

RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D
www.indiandentalacademy.com
RANK ORDER OF EFFICACY: A = C > B > D
Agonists and Antagonists
PARTIAL AGONIST
• A drug is said to be a partial agonist when it binds
to a receptor and causes a partial response.
• It has intrinsic activity < 1.

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
1. COMPETITIVE ANTAGONIST
Reversible & Surmountable
The effect of a reversible antagonist can be
overcome by more drug (agonist). A small dose of
the antagonist (inhibitor) will compete with a
fraction of the
receptors thus,
the higher the
concentration of
antagonist used,
the more drug
you need to get
the same effect. www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
RECEPTOR RESERVE OR SPARE RECEPTORS.
• Maximal effect does not require occupation of all
receptors by agonist.
• Low concentrations of competitive irreversible
antagonists may bind to receptors and a maximal
response can still be achieved.
• The actual number of receptors may exceed the
number of effector molecules available.

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
1. COMPETITIVE ANTAGONIST
Irreversible & Non-surmountable
The effect of irreversible antagonists cannot be
overcome by more drug (agonist). The antagonist
inactivates the receptors.

www.indiandentalacademy.com
LINEWEAVER-BURKE PLOT

1
KD

Effect
1
KD

Bmax
1
Bmax

11
Drug Concentration
[D]

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Agonists and Antagonists
Synergism
The combined effect of two drugs is higher
than the sum of their individual effects.

Additivity
The combined effect of two drugs is equal
to the sum of their individual effects.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Quantal Dose-response Curves

% population responding

Frequency of distribution
% population responding to drug A

1 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Dose (mg/kg)
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Quantal Dose-response Curves

% population responding

Cumulative distribution of population responding to
drug A

ED50
ED90

ED10
1

10

100

Dose (mg/kg) log scale
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Therapeutic Index

Toxic effect

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Therapeutic index
Therapeutic Index = TxD50
ED50
As long as the slopes of the curves are similar, however,
if not similar, we use the Standard Margin of safety:
Standard Margin of safety = TxD1–1 x 100
ED99
Which determines the percent to which the dose
effective in 99% of the population must be raised to
cause toxicity in 1% of the population.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Therapeutic Index
ED99

Toxic effect

ED1
ED13
www.indiandentalacademy.com
WEB Sites
•
•
•
•
•
•

Howard University
Howard University Site.htm
HU College of Medicine.htm
HUCM Departments.htm
pharmacology.htm
Pharmacology Course Materials.htm

www.indiandentalacademy.com
APPENDIX

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Law of Mass Action
When a drug (D) combines with a receptor (R), it
does so at a rate which is dependent on the
concentration of the drug and the concentration of the
receptor.

[D] + [R]

k1

k2

[DR]

(1)

D = drug
R = receptor,
DR = drug-receptor complex
k1 = rate for association and
k2 = rate for dissociation.

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Law of Mass Action
At equilibrium, the rate at which the radioligand binds to the receptor is equal to
the rate at which it dissociates:

association rate
k1 [D][R]
k2

=
=
=

k1
k2
k1

dissociation rate
k2 [DR]
[D][R]
[DR]

=

KD =

(2)

(3)

[D][R]
[DR]

(4)

Where KD is the equilibrium dissociation constant. The units for the K D are
concentration units (e.g. nM).
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Law of Mass Action
Another constant related to the KD is the affinity (KA) which is essentially
equivalent to the reciprocal of the K D. The units for the KA are inverse
concentration units (e.g. nM-1).
1

=

KA

=

KD

k1
k2

=

[DR]
[D] [R]

(5)

The relationship between the binding of a drug to a receptor at equilibrium and the
free concentration of the drug provides the basis for characterizing the affinity of
the drug for the receptor. The mathematical derivation of this relationship is
given below:
KD

=

KD [DR] =

[D][R]
[DR]
[D][R]
www.indiandentalacademy.com

(6)
(7)
Law of Mass Action
Substitutions:
…

[RT] = [R] = [DR]
[R] = [RT] - [DR]

(8)

KD[DR]

=

[D]([RT] - [DR])

(9)

KD[DR]

=

[D][RT] - [D][DR]

(10)

KD[DR] + [D][DR]

=

[D][RT]

(11)

[DR](KD + [D])

=

[D][RT]

(12)

=

[D][RT]
[D] + KD

(13)

[DR]

RT: Total number of receptors

www.indiandentalacademy.com
Law of Mass Action
[DR]

=

[D][RT]
[D] + KD

(13)

This relationship between specific binding [DR] and the free drug concentration
[D] in (13) is essentially the same as the relationship between the substrate
concentration ([S]) and the velocity of an enzymatic reaction (v) as described by
the Michaelis-Menten relationship:
v =

[S] Vmax
[S] + KM

Michaelis-Menten Relationship
where Vmax denotes the maximum rate of the reaction and K M denotes the
Michaelis constant, which is equivalent to the concentration of substrate required
for half-maximal velocity
www.indiandentalacademy.com
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Leader in continuing dental education

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Drug receptor interactions

  • 1. DRUG RECEPTOR INTERACTIONS INDIAN DENTAL ACADEMY Leader in continuing dental education www.indiandentalacademy.com www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 2. Law of Mass Action When a drug (D) combines with a receptor (R), it does so at a rate which is dependent on the concentration of the drug and the concentration of the receptor. [D] + [R] D = drug R = receptor, DR = drug-receptor complex k1 = rate for association and k2 = rate for dissociation. KD = Dissociation Constant KA = Association Constant k2 = k1  [DR] k2 KD = k1 1 [D][R] [DR] = KA = KD www.indiandentalacademy.com k1 k2 Read the Appendix at the back = [DR] [D] [R]
  • 3. Drug-Receptor Complex DR SATURATION CURVE [Drug] nM Log [Drug] www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 4. SATURATION CURVE [DR] max [DR] RT = Bmax k2 = KD = [D][R] k1 [Drug] nM RT = Total number of receptors www.indiandentalacademy.com Bmax = Maximal number of receptors Bound [DR]
  • 5. TIME COURSE [D] + [R] = [DR] [DR] Equilibrium k2 = KD k1 0 10 = [D][R] [DR] 20 30 40 Time (min) KD = Equilibrium Dissociation Constant www.indiandentalacademy.com 50 60
  • 6. [DR] SATURATION CURVE KD [Drug] nM At equilibrium, the dissociation constant is KD and the affinity is K A = 1/KD www.indiandentalacademy.com Thus when [D] = KD , half the total number of receptors will be occupied.
  • 7. Agonists and Antagonists AGONIST • A drug is said to be an agonist when it binds to a receptor and causes a response or effect. It has intrinsic activity = 1 +++ ++- --- --- +-- +++ www.indiandentalacademy.com Depolarization
  • 8. Agonists and Antagonists ANTAGONIST • A drug is said to be an antagonist when it binds to a receptor and prevents (blocks or inhibits) a natural compound or a drug to have an effect on the receptor. An antagonist has NO activity. Its intrinsic activity is = 0 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 9. Agonists and Antagonists PHARMACOLOGICAL ANTAGONISTS 1. Competitive They compete for the binding site • • 2. Reversible Irreversible Non-competitve Bind elsewhere in the receptor (Channel Blockers). www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 10. Agonists and Antagonists FUNCTIONAL ANTAGONISTS 1. Physiologic Antagonists 2. Chemical Antagonist www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 11. Agonists and Antagonists Physiologic ANTAGONIST • A drug that binds to a non-related receptor, producing an effect opposite to that produced by the drug of interest. • Its intrinsic activity is = 1, but on another receptor. Glucocorticoid Hormones  Blood Sugar Insulin  Blood Sugar www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 12. Agonists and Antagonists Chemical ANTAGONIST • A chelator (sequester) of similar agent that interacts directly with the drug being antagonized to remove it or prevent it from binding its receptor. • A chemical antagonist does not depend on interaction with the agonist’s receptor (although such interaction may occur). Heparin, an anticoagulant, acidic If there is too much  bleeding and haemorrhaging Protamine sulfate is a base. It forms a stable inactive complex www.indiandentalacademy.com with heparin and inactivates it.
  • 13. Competition Binding IC50 Log [I] nM Binding of Drug D www.indiandentalacademy.com I = Competitor
  • 14. Competition Binding Four drugs A B C D IC50 Log [I] nM RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 15. Effect or Response SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE Drug Concentration www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 16. SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE Effect or Response Maximal Effect 50% Effect ED50 Drug Concentration www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 17. SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE EFFECT Maximal Effect EFFICACY POTENCY ED50 Log [Dose] www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 18. SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE B C EFFECT A Log [Dose] RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D www.indiandentalacademy.com D
  • 19. SEMILOG DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE A RESPONSE B C D ED50 RANK ORDER OF POTENCY: A > B > C > D www.indiandentalacademy.com RANK ORDER OF EFFICACY: A = C > B > D
  • 20. Agonists and Antagonists PARTIAL AGONIST • A drug is said to be a partial agonist when it binds to a receptor and causes a partial response. • It has intrinsic activity < 1. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 21. Agonists and Antagonists 1. COMPETITIVE ANTAGONIST Reversible & Surmountable The effect of a reversible antagonist can be overcome by more drug (agonist). A small dose of the antagonist (inhibitor) will compete with a fraction of the receptors thus, the higher the concentration of antagonist used, the more drug you need to get the same effect. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 22. Agonists and Antagonists RECEPTOR RESERVE OR SPARE RECEPTORS. • Maximal effect does not require occupation of all receptors by agonist. • Low concentrations of competitive irreversible antagonists may bind to receptors and a maximal response can still be achieved. • The actual number of receptors may exceed the number of effector molecules available. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 23. Agonists and Antagonists 1. COMPETITIVE ANTAGONIST Irreversible & Non-surmountable The effect of irreversible antagonists cannot be overcome by more drug (agonist). The antagonist inactivates the receptors. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 25. Agonists and Antagonists Synergism The combined effect of two drugs is higher than the sum of their individual effects. Additivity The combined effect of two drugs is equal to the sum of their individual effects. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 26. Quantal Dose-response Curves % population responding Frequency of distribution % population responding to drug A 1 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Dose (mg/kg) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 27. Quantal Dose-response Curves % population responding Cumulative distribution of population responding to drug A ED50 ED90 ED10 1 10 100 Dose (mg/kg) log scale www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 29. Therapeutic index Therapeutic Index = TxD50 ED50 As long as the slopes of the curves are similar, however, if not similar, we use the Standard Margin of safety: Standard Margin of safety = TxD1–1 x 100 ED99 Which determines the percent to which the dose effective in 99% of the population must be raised to cause toxicity in 1% of the population. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 31. WEB Sites • • • • • • Howard University Howard University Site.htm HU College of Medicine.htm HUCM Departments.htm pharmacology.htm Pharmacology Course Materials.htm www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 33. Law of Mass Action When a drug (D) combines with a receptor (R), it does so at a rate which is dependent on the concentration of the drug and the concentration of the receptor. [D] + [R] k1  k2 [DR] (1) D = drug R = receptor, DR = drug-receptor complex k1 = rate for association and k2 = rate for dissociation. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 34. Law of Mass Action At equilibrium, the rate at which the radioligand binds to the receptor is equal to the rate at which it dissociates: association rate k1 [D][R] k2 = = = k1 k2 k1 dissociation rate k2 [DR] [D][R] [DR] = KD = (2) (3) [D][R] [DR] (4) Where KD is the equilibrium dissociation constant. The units for the K D are concentration units (e.g. nM). www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 35. Law of Mass Action Another constant related to the KD is the affinity (KA) which is essentially equivalent to the reciprocal of the K D. The units for the KA are inverse concentration units (e.g. nM-1). 1 = KA = KD k1 k2 = [DR] [D] [R] (5) The relationship between the binding of a drug to a receptor at equilibrium and the free concentration of the drug provides the basis for characterizing the affinity of the drug for the receptor. The mathematical derivation of this relationship is given below: KD = KD [DR] = [D][R] [DR] [D][R] www.indiandentalacademy.com (6) (7)
  • 36. Law of Mass Action Substitutions: … [RT] = [R] = [DR] [R] = [RT] - [DR] (8) KD[DR] = [D]([RT] - [DR]) (9) KD[DR] = [D][RT] - [D][DR] (10) KD[DR] + [D][DR] = [D][RT] (11) [DR](KD + [D]) = [D][RT] (12) = [D][RT] [D] + KD (13) [DR] RT: Total number of receptors www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 37. Law of Mass Action [DR] = [D][RT] [D] + KD (13) This relationship between specific binding [DR] and the free drug concentration [D] in (13) is essentially the same as the relationship between the substrate concentration ([S]) and the velocity of an enzymatic reaction (v) as described by the Michaelis-Menten relationship: v = [S] Vmax [S] + KM Michaelis-Menten Relationship where Vmax denotes the maximum rate of the reaction and K M denotes the Michaelis constant, which is equivalent to the concentration of substrate required for half-maximal velocity www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 38. www.indiandentalacademy.com Leader in continuing dental education www.indiandentalacademy.com