Intro to Drug Action

Key definitions

  • Pharmacology: the study of the manner in which the function of living tissues and organs is modified by chemical substances
  • Pharmacology: what a drug does to the body
  • Pharmacokinetics: what the body does to a drug
  • Drug: any single synthetic or natural substance of known structure used in the treatment, prevention or diagnosis of disease
  • Medicine: chemical preparation containing one or more drugs; therapeutic effect
  • Selectivity: the ability of a drug to distinguish between different molecular targets within the body

Agonists and antagonists

  • Agonist: drug that binds to a receptor to produce a cellular response
    • Temporarily activate receptors by producing a conformational change
    • Possess affinity and efficacy
  • Affinity: strength of association between ligand and receptor (binding)
  • Efficacy: ability of an agonist to evoke a cellular response (activation)
  • Antagonist: drug that reduces, or blocks, the actions of an agonist by binding to the same receptor – do not activate them
    • Possess affinity but lack efficacy

Potency and efficacy

  • Potency: amount of drug required to produce a desired effect
  • Efficacy: maximum response achievable from drug
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EC50

  • Concentration of agonist that elicits half maximal effect
  • Easy to see using semi-logarithmic plot of concentration vs. effect - sigmoidal relationship

Competitive and non-competitive antagonism

Competitive antagonism

  • Binding of agonist and antagonist occur at same (orthosteric) site - competitive
  • Cause parallel right shift of agonist concentration response curve with no depression in maximal response

Non-competitive antagonism

  • Agonist binds to normal site and antagonist binds to separate (allosteric) site - not competitive
  • Both may occupy sites simultaneously, but activation cannot occur when antagonist is bound
  • Depress the slope and maximum response curve, but do not cause a rightwards shift
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