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pharmacology midterm
pharmacology midterm billack
194
Pharmacology
Graduate
04/11/2012

Additional Pharmacology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
medical pharmacology
Definition
the science of substances used to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease
Term
material medica
Definition
the science of drug prep, and the medical use of drugs. it was the precursor to pharmacy
Term
Rudolf Buccheim
Definition
the first chair of pharmacology
Term
Oswald shmeideberg
Definition

a student of rudolf buccheim. he studied chloroform. trained over 60 phD pharmacologists.

known as the father of pharmacology.

Term
John Jacob Abel
Definition
a student of Oswald schmeideberg who discovered epinephrine, histamine, and how to puriy/crystalize insulin. his student discovered acetylcholine.
Term
receptor
Definition
a specific molecule in the biologic system that plays a regulatory role
Term
3 types of bonds that interact with receptors
Definition

1. covalent

2.electrostatic

3. hydrophobic

Term
covalent bond & examples
Definition
  • strongest type
  • usually irreversible
  • less common than electrostatic bonds
  • examples: 
    • acetyl group of asprin and COX 
    • DNA alkylating agents used in chemo to disrupt cell division of tumor
Term
electrostatic bonds
Definition

weaker and more common than covalent bonds. 

range from strong ionic bonds to weaker van der waals forces. 

Term
hydrophobic bonds
Definition

the weakest of the 3 receptor bonds

important in interactions of highly lipid soluble drugs with lipids of cell membranes

Term
drugs with importance in chirality
Definition

Carvedilol

ketamine

metacholine 

Term
Carvedilol
Definition

the S enantiomer is a potent B-receptor blocker

the R enantiomer is 100x weaker (at blocking beta receptors)

both are equipotent as alpha-receptor-blockers

Term
Ketamine
Definition
the (+) enantiomer is a more potent anesthetic and less toxic than the (-) enantiomer
Term
Methacholine
Definition
S+ enantiomer is 250x more potent than the R- enantiomer
Term
pharmacodynamics
Definition

determines the group the drug is classified in

and whether that group is appropriate for a particular symptom or disease

Term
pharmacokinetics
Definition

the effect of the body on the drug

governs ADME of drugs

important in choice of administration route of a drug for a particular patient

Term
Atropine
Definition

it is an acetylcholine receptor blocker (antagonist)

it prevents access of Ach to the Ach receptor site

it stabilizes the receptor in its inactive state

it reduces effects of Ach in the body

can be overcome by increasing agonist concentration 

Term
allosteric inhibition
Definition

antagonists that bind very tightly in an irreversible way

they cant be displaced by increasing concentration of agonist.

Term
allosteric binding
Definition

in this kind of binding, the drugs bind to the same receptor, but don't prevent the binding of agonist. 

action of the agonist may be enhanced or inhibited. 

Term
full agonists
Definition
can activate their receptor-effector systems to the max extent of which it is capable when administered at concentrations sufficient to saturate the receptor pool
Term
partial agonists
Definition

bind to the same receptors that full agonists do, but do not evoke as great a response 

 

ex: pindolol:

Term
pindolol
Definition

a partial agonist

it acts as an agonist if no full agonist is present 

it acts as an antagonist if a full agonist is present

Term
neutral antagonism
Definition

the inactive and active receptor forms are bound in the same amounts

no changes are observed

drug will appear to be without effect

 

Term
inverse agonists
Definition

drugs that have a stronger affinity for the inactive form and reduces constitutive activity, resuting in effects that are the opposite of those produced by conventional agonists at that receptor. 

 

Term
inert binding site
Definition

binding of a drug to an __________ will result in no chance in the function of the biologic system

pharmacokinetic importance: this type of binding effects distribution of drug within the body because it determines amount of free drug in circulation

ex: plasma albumin

Term
four mechanisms by which drugs permeate throughout the body
Definition
  1. aqueous diffusion
  2. lipid diffusion
  3. special carriers
  4. endocytosis and exocytosis 
Term
aqueous diffusion
Definition

driven by the concentration gradient of the drug, a downhill movement

drugs bound to plasma proteins wont permeate these pores

occurs within intestinal space and cytosol, across epithelial membrane tight junctions and the endothelial lining of blood vessels through aqueous pores

 

Term
Lipid diffusion
Definition

this is the most important limiting factor for drug permeation bc of the large # of lipid barriers separating body compartments. 

the lipid:aq partition coefficient of a drug determines how readily the dru gmoves btwn the aq and lipid media

Term
endocytosis
Definition

occurs when substances are too large or impermeant. 

the substance is bound at cell surface receptor, engulfed by the membrane, and carried into cell by pinching of the newly formed vescicle inside the membrane. the substance is released inside the cytosol by breakdown of vesicle membrane. 

Term
transport of vitamin B12 and iron
Definition
endocytosis (vescicles)
Term
exocytosis
Definition
responsible for the secretion of many substances from the cells (NTs)
Term
ficks law of diffusion
Definition

[image]

gives the passive flux of molecules down a concentration gradient

  • C1: high concentration - C2: low conc
  • area: of the place accross which diffusion is occuring
  • permeability coeff: mobility of the drug molecules in the medium of the diffusion path
  • thickness: length of the diffusion path 
Term
henderson hasselbalch equation
Definition
log (protonated) / (unprotonated) = pka - pH
Term
signal transduction
Definition

process by which extracellular signaling molecule activates a membrane receptor. 

in turn, intracellular molecules are altered. 

this creates a response. 

Term
ph of breastmilk
Definition

6.4 - 7.6

is the pH of ... 

Term
pH of Jejunum, ileum
Definition

7.5-8.0 

is the pH of ... 

Term
pH of stomach
Definition

1.92-2.59 

is the pH of... 

Term
pH of prostatic secretions
Definition

6.54-7.40 

is the pH of ... 

Term
pH of vaginal secretions
Definition

3.4-4.2

is the pH of ... 

Term
pH of urine
Definition

5.0-8.0

is the pH of ... 

 

hint: has the biggest range out of all the compartments we need to know 

Term
regulatory proteins
Definition

mediate the actions of endogenous chemical signals 

ex: NTs, autacoids and hormones

Term
methotrexate
Definition

an antineoplastic drug that binds to & inhibits the Dihydrosfolate reductace (Dhfr) enzyme receptor

this stops DNA production because folate is needed to make thymine. 

supresses tumor growth

Term
transport proteins
Definition

involved in the transport of ions or other molecules 

ex: Na/K ATPase is the membrane receptor for cardioactive digitalis glycosides

Term
tubulin
Definition

a structural protein that is the receptor for colchicine, an antiinflammatory agent. 

structural proteins maintain cellular integrety 

Term
concentration effect curve
Definition

hyperbolic curve

relates drug concentration and its effect

resembles the mass action law 

Term
mass action law
Definition
tells us the association btw 2 molecules of a given affinity
Term
Kd of agonist receptor interaction
Definition
determines what fraction of total receptors will be occupied at a given free concentration of agonist, regardless of the receptor concentration
Term
Kd
Definition

characterizes the receptor's affinity for binding the drug in a RECIPROCAL fashion 

 

the conc of agonist when 50% of the receptors are bound/occupied

Term
how to determine if a tissue has spare receptors:
Definition
use irreversible antagonists to prevent binding of agonist to a proportion of available receptors, and show that high concentrations of agonist can still produce max response.
Term
spare receptor example:
Definition

B-adrenoceptors in myocardial cells of the heart. 

 

we know these are spare receptors because the max response to catecholamines can still be elicited when 90% of the receptors are occupied by a quasi irreversible antagonist

Term
mechanism behind spare receptor 
Definition
the response initiated by an individual ligand-receptor binding event lasts longer than the binding itself
Term
how to change the sensitivity of tissues with spare receptors?
Definition
change the receptor concentration will _________________ of tissues with spare receptors
Term
G proteins 
Definition
coupling molecules 
Term
effector
Definition
a molecule that binds a protein/enzyme and alters its activity by either increasing or decreasing its effects
Term
inverse agonist 
Definition

a type of antagonist 

it reduces receptor activity below basal levels observed in the absence of a bound ligand 

Term
2 classes of antagonists
Definition

reversible/competitive antagonists

&

Irreversible/nonsurmountable  antagonists

Term
schilds equation 
Definition

[image]

ratio of the concentration of agonist required to produce a given effect in the presence of a fixedconcentration of competitive agonist and the agonist concentration required to produce the same effect in the absense of agonist

Term
Ki
Definition
dissociation constant
Term
[image]
Definition

Schild's Equation

The concentration (C') of an agonist required to produce a given effect in the presence of a fixed concentration ([I]) of competitive antagonist is compared to  the agonist concentration (C) required to produce the same effect in the absence of the antagonist. The ratio of these two agonist concentrations (dose ratio) is related to the dissociation constant (Ki) of the antagonist

Term
dose ratio 
Definition

a measure of the potency of the drug and tightly the drug binds to the receptor

 

the larger the difference, the tighter it binds and the harder to compete it out

Term
dose ratio of what 2 factors is the schild equation?
Definition

1. concentration of agonist required to produce a given effect in the presence of a fixed concentration of competitive agonist

2. the agonist concentration required to produce the same effect in the absence of agonist 

Term
phenoxybenzamine 
Definition

used to treat pheochromocytoma 

it is an irreversible alpha adrenoceptor antagonist, used to control hypertension caused by catecholamines released from pheochromocytoma (tumor of the adrenal medulla)

the tumor releases a lot of E or NE at random times, which spikes BP. 

administration of phenoxybenzamine inhibits the receptors irreversibly so the blockade will be maintained even when the tumor releases large amounts of chatecholamine. 

Term
chemical antagonism 
Definition

antagonism that doesnt involve interactions of drugs at a receptor

the antagonist takes the drug away from the receptor

ex: protamine 

Term
protamine 
Definition
example of a chemical antagonist which acts to counteract the effects of heparin. heparin is a negatively charged anticooagulant. _____ is (+) charged. due to their opposite charges they bind, which makes heparin unavailable for interactions with proteins involved in formation of blood clots
Term
physiological antagonism 
Definition

antagonism that does not involve drug-receptor interaction. 

this antagonism takes advantage of endogenous regulatory pathways mediated by different receptors. 


ex: glucocorticoids increase blood sugar, opposed by insulin

Term
Bradycardia
Definition

abnormally slow heartbeatcaused by increased release of Ach from vagus nerve endings (ie after a heart attack)

two different approaches to treat: 

  • isoproterenol 
  • aropine 
Term
isoproterenol 
Definition

a B-adrenoceptor agonist that increases heart rate by mimicking sympathetic stimulation of the heart (the opposite effect of a heart attack)

this can be ore dangerous than using a receptor-specific antagonist (atropine)

Term
nitric oxide
Definition
acts by crossing the membrane and stimulating the enzyme guanylyl cyclase. it diffuses into the cell, binds to the enzyme, takes the G and turns it from a linear GTP to a cyclic product (cGMP)
Term
glucocorticoids
Definition
signaling mechanism: HSP90 binds to receptor in absence of hormone and prevents folding into active conformation of the receptor. Binding of a steroid causes dissociation of HSP90 and permits conversion to active conformation 
Term
HSP90
Definition
an inhibitory constraint that usually keeps the receptor in the cytoplasm. it prevents the drug from entering the nucleus and messing around. 
Term
Smooth ER
Definition
major site of phase 1 drug metabolism 
Term
cyp2a6
Definition
responsible for nicotine oxidation 
Term
cyp1a2
Definition
induced by smoking 
Term
isoniazid
Definition

undergoes phase 2 before 1

slow acetylators are prone to toxicity of this drug

Term
methotrexate
Definition
supresses tumor growth by acting at the enzyme dhfr: dihydrofolate reductase
Term
botulinum toxin 
Definition
can block the step where exocytoic expulsion of Ach and cotransmitters into the junctional cleft occur
Term
opening voltage gated calcium channels.... 
Definition
stimulates release of acetylcholine 
Term
kd
Definition
the concentration of drug at which half the maximal number of receptors are occupied 
Term
Bmax
Definition
indicates the total concentration of receptor sites (ie, sites bound to the drug at infinitely high concentrations of free drug)
Term
alpha 2 adrenoceptor
Definition
presnaptic adrenergic nerve terminals 
Term
alpha 1 adrenoceptor
Definition
postsynaptic effector cells, especially vascular smooth muscle
Term
adrenal medulla
Definition
acts as a modified sympathetic ganglion that recieves sympathetic preganglionic fibers and releases norepinephrine and epinephrine into the blood 
Term
parathion 
Definition
covalent inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase
Term
tubocurarine 
Definition
nondepolarizing skeletal muscle blocker 
Term
scopolamine 
Definition
decreased accomidation, increased pupil diameter
Term
hyoscyamine
Definition
treats urinary incontinence (overactive bladder) or iritable bowel syndrome 
Term
propantheline 
Definition
used to treat hypermotility states of the gut 
Term
atropine 
Definition
likely to enter CNS 
Term
Gs
Definition
activated in response to binding of isoproterenol to beta1 receptors
Term
grapefruit juice inhibits... 
Definition
cyp3a4 and cyp1a2
Term

this process is known as:

[image]

Definition
receptor desensitization
Term

what happens to receptors after they are internalized? Internilization : 

[image]

Definition

two things can happen: 

1. : unbinding of ligand and receptor recycling (happenns really quick in matter of seconds) (desensitization)

 

2.  destroying and down regulation

 

Know difference between down regulation and desensitization (transient)

Down regulation is longer bcgotta go thru transcription process to make new receptors 

Term
Atrialnatriuretic factor (ANF
Definition
), an important regulator of blood volume and vascular tone, acts on a transmembrane receptor whose intracellular domain has a guanylylcylase activity (GC).  Like receptor tyrosine kinases, and receptor serine kinases, ANF receptors are active in their dimeric forms.
Term
examples of biological second messangers
Definition

cAMP

Ca++

Phosphoinositides

Term
Td50 stands for 
Definition
 median toxic dose
Term
median toxic dose (Td50) 
Definition
the dose required to produce a particular toxic effect in 50% of animals is called the
Term
ED50
Definition
median effective dose
Term
median effective dose (ED50)
Definition
 the dose at which 50% of individuals exhibit the specified quantal effect. 
Term
[image]
Definition

Quantal dose-effect plots.

Shaded boxes (and the accompanying bell-shaped curves) indicate the frequency distribution of doses of drug required to produce a specified effect; that is, the percentage of animals that required a particular dose to exhibit the effect. The open boxes (and the corresponding colored curves) indicate the cumulative frequency distribution of responses, which are lognormally distributed

Term
LD50 
Definition
median lethal dose
Term
median lethal dose (LD50) 
Definition
if the toxic effect of the TD50 leads to death then it is called 
Term
cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase
Definition

theophyline

caffeine

methylxanthines 

Term
Gi protein 
Definition
inhibits adenylyl cyclase and cytosolic cAMP levels fall 
Term
Gq
Definition
Stimulates phospholipase C and cytosolic Ca++ increases 
Term
Gs
Definition
stimulates adenylyl cyclase and cytosolic cAMP levels rise
Term
IV route of admin
Definition
most rapid onset 
Term
rectal route of admin 
Definition
less first pass effect than oral 
Term
oral route of admin 
Definition
most convenient but has significant first pass effect
Term
SC route of admin 
Definition
usually used to administer peptide drugs 
Term
What is the effect of Phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic tail of the beta adrenergic g protein coupled receptoor by BARK kinase?
Definition
down regulation 
Term
phenoxybenzamine
Definition
an irreversibele antagonist (non-surmountable antagonist) that binds to alpha adrenergic receptor 
Term
examples of drugs that have one enantiomer more potent than the other
Definition

ketamine

metacholine

carvedilol

Term
tamoxifen 
Definition
acts as an agonist of estrogen receptors in bone 
Term
cimetidine 
Definition
an anti ulcer drug which is a competitive inhibitor of the metabolizing enzymes cyp3a4 and cyp2d6
Term
kd
Definition
equilibrium dissociation constant: the concentration of drug at which half of the maximal number of receptors is occupied 
Term
through which mechanism do hormones regulate gene expression?
Definition
through intracellular receptors for lipid soluble agents
there is a lag period for 30 minutes
effects can last for days
Term
guanylyl cyclase
Definition

intracellular enzyme stimulated by Nitric oxide once NO crosses the membrane 

  • once NO diffuses into the cell, it binds to the enzyme, takes the G, and turns it from a linear GTP to a cyclic produc (CGMP)
Term
HSP90
Definition
Heat shock protein 90
Term
signaling mechanism of glucocorticoids 
Definition
Hsp90 binds to receptor in absence of hormone and prevents folding into active conformation of the receptor. binding of this steroid causes dissociation of HSP90 which permits conversion into the active form. 
Term
Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90)
Definition

an inhibitory constraint that usually keeps the receptor in the cytoplasm. it prevents the drug from entering the nucleus and messing around

in the absence of hormone, the receptor is bound to this protein. binding of the steroid glucocorticoid to the normal receptor triggers release of hsp90. this allows the activated receptor to initiate transcription of target genes in the nucleus. 

Term
glucocorticoids
Definition

these hormones produce effects after a lag period of 30 minutes to several hours, which is the time taken for the synthesis of new proteins. 

ex: wont immediately relieve symptoms of acute bronchial asthma

the effects can last for hours or days after the conc has reached zero due to slow turnover of enzymes and proteins. 

Term
receptor tyrosine kinases
Definition
  • polypeptides with an extracellular hormone binding domain and a cytoplasmic enzyme domain. the two domains are connected by a hydrophobic segment of the polypeptide that crosses the lipid membrane 
  • they mediate the first steps in signaling by insulin, epidermal growth factor, platelet derived growth factor and atrial natriuretic peptide
  • when a hormone binds to extracellular domain it results ina change in receptor conformation that causes the receptor molecules to bind to one another noncovalently
  • the protein tyr kinase domains are brought together
  • the tyr residues in both cytoplasmic domainsbecome phosphorylated by each other forming dimers-autophosphorylation. 
  • this activates enzymatic activity and catalyzes phosphorylation of substrate proteins

 

Term
Receptor down regulation 
Definition

limits the intensity and duration of epidermal growth factor and other agonists of RTKs. 

ligand binding induces endocytosis of receptos from the cell surface, followed by degradation of those receptors and their bound ligands 

When receptor degradation occurs faster than synthesis of receptors, the total number of cell surface receptors is reduced

as a result that cell's responsiveness to ligand is diminished

Term
receptor-recycling
Definition

once EGF binds to RTK it unergoes rapid endocytosis, and is trafficked to lysosomes. 

________________ is the process where the receptors in the vescicles are brought back to the cell surface rather than being degraded. 

Term
Desensitization
Definition

the number of receptors doesn't change, they are just in the process of being recycled. 

 

Term
ANF stands for 
Definition
atrial natriuretic factor 
Term
ANF 
Definition

a regulator of blood bolume and vascular tone. 

it acts on a transmembrane receptor whose IC domain, a guanylyl cyclase, generates cGMP. 

they become active in their dimeric form 

it binds when blood pressure is high 

Term
receptor serine-threonine kinases
Definition

receptors that have sytoplasmic domains with serine/threonine kinase activity. they are transmembrane enzymes. 

ex: TGF-B

Term
 TGF-B receptor
Definition

serene-threonine kinases that signal thru the SMAD family of proteins

regulates growth and proliferation of cells, blocks growth of many cell types. 

there are type 1 and 2 subunits

Term
cytokines
Definition
pharmacologically active proteins of low MW that are secreted by the cell for the purpose of altering either its own functions (autocrine effect) or those of adjacent cells (paracrine effect)
Term
cytokine receptors
Definition

these receptors respond to peptide ligands that include growth hormones, erythropoietin, interferons, and other regulators of growth and regulation. 

 

once the receptors are activated by ligand they form a dimer

the cytoplasmic domain has no enzymatic activity with itself so it associates with JAK which bind noncovalently 

Term
JAK kinasse
Definition

when kinase receptors are activated and form a dimer, it associates with __________ noncovalently. 

 

it becomes active and phosphorylates tyr residues on the receptor, which bind STATs

 

the bound STATs are also phosphorylated by ______

Term
STAT
Definition
signal transductor and activator of transcription 
Term
STAT (signal transducers and activators of transcription)
Definition
  • recruited when tyrosine is phosphorylated, and then it binds to the tyr residues on the receptor
  • once bound it becomes phosphorylated by JAK.
  • the phosphorylated _____ then dissociate from cytoplasmic side of receptor and form a dimer with eachother
  • ______ dimer then travels to nucleus where it regulates gene transcription 
Term

natural ligands of ligand-gated channels

(synaptic transmitters)

Definition
  • acetylcholine
  • serotonin
  • GABA
  • excitatory amino acids
    • glycine
    • asp
    • glu

 

Term
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor 
Definition

a pentamer made up of 4 diff polypeptide subunits (2 alpha 1 beta 1 gamma 1 delta)

example of a ligand gated transmembrane ion channel that can be induced toopen by ligand binding. 

  • opened by Ach
  • allows Na+ to flow down its conc gradient into cells, producing a depolarization
  • in the absence of ligand, the receptor is closed and sodium ion cant pass through
  • immediate pharmacological effects
  • calcium acts as a second messanger after being released & it triggers transduction cascades
Term
calcium 
Definition

released when Ach binds to ligand gated channel or it can be released from a change in cell potential (electrical charge across the membrane)

it acts as a second messanger and triggers cell transduction cascades 

Term
G proteins 
Definition
receptor-coupled proteins that bind guanine nucleotides and activate intracellular messenger systems 
Term
adenylyl cyclase
Definition

an effector enzyme activated by G protein 

when activated it increases intracellular second messangers

Term
mechanism of G protein 
Definition

involves binding and hydrolysis of GTP

G protein is associated with GDP when GPCR is not activated by ligand. when it is activated, GDP is released and GTP takes its place on the binding site of the G protein. the activated G protein leavs receptor and regulates teh acivity of an effector enzyme or ion channel. 

 

signal is terminated by hydrolysis of gtp then effector goes back to unstimulated state. 

Term
three major types of G protein 
Definition
Gs, Gi , Gq
Term
Gs
Definition

type of G protein

effector is increased adenylyl cyclase activity, and increased cAMP

 

how to remember: S for Speed, speed is sortof synonomous with increased and the opposite of slow (Gi)

Term
Gi
Definition

G protein that decreases adenylyl cyclase activity and decreases cAMP

 

it openss cardiac K+ channels to slow 

how to remember: I is close to J in the alphabet (HIJK), and Gi opens K+ channels

opposite of Gs

Term
Gq
Definition
G protein that results in increased phospholipase C activity, increasing IP3, DAG, and cytoplasmic Ca2+
Term
receptor desensitization 
Definition
rapidly reversible 
Term
receptor phosphorylation 
Definition
a mechanism mediating rapid desensitization 
Term
fate of internalized beta adrenergic receptors 
Definition

ligand binding activates Gs-GTP as well as BARK (B-adrenergic receptor kinase) which phosphorylates the sytoplasmic tail of GPCR on ser/thre residues. B-arr then binds to tail, resulting in diminished ability of receptor to interact with G protein. 

result is reduced response of agonist. 

when agonist is removed, phosphatases cleave phosphates form the tail, and BARK activity is decreased so the receptor is ready to respond to agonist. 

in other words, it has reset itself 

Term
fate of internalizatin of EGF receptor 
Definition
down regulation 
Term
difference between desensitization and down regulation 
Definition

desensitized b receptors can be resensitized. internalized receptors return to plasma membranes

down regulated receptors are degraded in lysosomes so they decrease cellular responsiveness. this has a slower onset and prolonged effect. 

Term
major second messangers used in responses of cells to drugs 
Definition
  • cAMP 
  • Ca2+
  • phosphoinositides
  • cGMP 
Term
receptors that activate adenylyl cyclase via Gs
Definition
  • beta adrenergic amines
  • glucagon
  • histamine
  • serotonin
  • other horones 
Term
increased cAMP levels 
Definition
  • means cAMP kinase is activated, therefore more substrates are phosphorylated
  • more glucose is released
  • insulin is needed to store sugar in cells 
Term
cAMP-dependent protein kinases 
Definition
made up of a cAMP binding regulatory dimer and 2 catalytic chains 
Term
how is cAMP signaling terminated?
Definition
  1. hydrolysis of GTP so adenyl cyclase is inactivated and no more cAMP is made
  2. conversion of cAMP to linear AMP through cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase
  3. dephosphorylation of substrate generated by cAMP kinase 
Term
competitive inhibitors of phosphodiesterases
Definition

caffeine, theophylline, methylxanthine.

 

in the presence of either of these, cAMP responses continue so cAMP levels stay high.  since cAMP kinase is dependent on cAMP it stays as well 

Term
phosphodiesterase
Definition

terminates cAMP signalling in cells by converting it into linear AMP 

 

can be inhibited by caffeine, theophylline, and methylxanthines  (competitive inhibitors)

Term
inhibitors of adenylyl cyclase
Definition
  • Alpha-adrenergic amines
  • muscarinic Ach
  • opoids
  • serotonin
  • GABA receptors 
Term
effects of decreased cAMP levels
Definition
  • cAMP kinase activity is decreased
  • less substrates are phosphorylated
  • more glycogen is in the body resulting in glucagon release and possibly hyperglycemia 
Term
receptors that activate phospholipace C via Gq
Definition
  • muscarinic ach
  • bombesin
  • serotonin receptors
  • platelet activating factor 
Term
Phospholipase C
Definition

a membrane enzyme stimulated by Gq that splits a phosphoipid component of the plasma membrane into 2 second messengers :

  1. DAG: stays in membrane and activates protein kinase C
  2. IPE : water soluble, diffuses thru cytoplasm to trigger release of ca2+ by binding to ligand gated calcium channels in the membranes of the Er

 

Term
IP3
Definition

a second messenger that triggers release of Ca2+ by binding to ligand-gated calcium channels in the membranes of the ER

it is water soluble so it diffuses thru cytoplasm

it is activated by phospholipase C (which is activated by Gq)

 

Term
calmodulin
Definition

activated by binding of Ca2+

it regulates activities of other enzymes including protein kinases. 

Term
increased cellular levels of cGMP
Definition
  • causes relaxation of vascular smooth muscle
Term
sildenafil 
Definition
a drug that causes vasodilation by inhibiting phosphodiesterases. this interferes with metabolic breakdown of cGMP
Term
accessory proteins 
Definition
interact with steroid receptors and chang ethe functional effects of drug-receptor interaction 
Term
tamoxifem 
Definition
antagonist on estrogen receptors in mammary tissue, agonist on those in bone, partial agonist action in uterus to stimulate endometrial cell proliferation 
Term
graded dose response curves
Definition

show efects on a continuous scale and the intensity of the effect is proportional to the dose. you can measure the response at any point on the curve. indicates the maximal efficacy of a drug

[image]

Term
quantal dose response curves 
Definition
[image]
Term
similarities btwn graded and quantal dose response curves
Definition
both provide info regarding potency and selectivity of drugs. 
Term
maximal efficacy
Definition

measure of the effect produced by the drug

has to do with ability of drug to reach receptors, not on its potency 

Term
tachyphylaxis
Definition
responsiveness decreases rapidly after drug admin 
Term
prazosin 
Definition

alpha blocker

acts on receptors in vascular smooth muscle to reduce blod pressure. depending on plasma concentration may cause postural hypotension, which is a sudden drop in bp when standing. 

Term
orthostatic intolerance
Definition
when a person gets symptoms during upright standing that's relieved by sitting down 
Term
o
Definition

sudden drop in bp when standing

 

can be  a result of taking prazosin

Term
Vd (volume of distribution )
Definition
the measure of the apparent space in the body available to contain the drug 
Term

alpha 2 adreno receptor 

what tissue?

Definition

presynaptic adrenergic nerve terminals 

what adrenoceptor?

Term

alpha 1 adrenoceptor

what tissues

Definition
postsynaptic effector cells, vascular smooth muscle 
Term
sympathetic stimulation of bronchiolar smooth muscle 
Definition
bronchodilation 
Term
sympathetic stimulation of heart
Definition
heart rate speeds up 
Term
sympathetic stimulation of endothelial cells 
Definition
no effect
Term
parasympathetic stimulation of bronchiolar smooth muscle 
Definition
constriction 
Term
parasympathetic stimulation of heart 
Definition
heart rate slows down 
Term
parasympathetic stimulation of endothelial cells 
Definition
release of EDRF (nitric oxide)
Term
sympathetic stimulation of liver
Definition
glycogenolysis
Term
sympathetic stimulation of fat cells 
Definition
lipolysis
Term
sympathetic stimlationj bladder 
Definition
relaxation 
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