BMS3021 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Psychosis, Penicillin, Pharmacology

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Week 2. Key concepts in drug discovery and
Pharmacokinectics in drug discovery
KEY CONCEPTS IN DRUG DISCOVERY
Drug = any chemical substance (other than a nutrient or essential dietary ingredient) that brings
about a change in biological function
Nature of a disease:
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Targets for drug action:
A drug will not work unless its bound
o Most drugs exert their effects by binding to protein molecules:
Enzymes
Ion channels
eg. voltage gated Na+ channels are inhibited by local anaesthetics that plugs the
channel
Transporters
eg. antidepressant agents
Receptors (one of the main targets, specifically cell surface receptors)
eg. Parkiso’s disease
Binding to the receptor:
Binding of a drug depends on physiochemical properties of a drug and its receptor
o Binding is reversible
o Ioi/hdroge/a der aal’s iteratios ot oalet
o Reeptors reogise ad a id lose lasses of a drug due to having similar
structures with particular amino acids on ligand binding domain-> not very specific
What we look for in a drug is a big degree of selectivity that only at a given range of
concentrations is only able to act at one given target
Selectivity and specificity depend on the capacity of a particular agent at a range of
concentrations to affect more than one target
We want something that can target at a big range of concentrations and not worry about
targeting other things
Cell surface receptors allow drugs on the outside to affect the inside
Activation of blockade has profound effects on cellular activity:
o Agonists = activate
o Antagonists = blockade
o Effects on cell:
Growth
Shape
Differentiation
Movement
Division
Apoptosis
Metabolism
Secretion
Excitability
First phase of drug discovery is based on testing both man-made or natural compounds for their
activity at specific receptor targets
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Comparisons between drugs are based on potency/affinity/efficacy at the receptor target
(eg. if affinity is too low -> need to increase dosage -> risk of spilling over)
The perfect drug:
Pharmacodynamic properties
-how drugs act to alter the body
function
o Selective?
o Potent?
o Valid drug target?
o High affinity? how tightly does it bind
Pharmacokinetic properties
- how does the body interact
with the drug
o Absorbable?
o Does it go where it needs to be?
o Metabolisable?
o Excretable?
(ADME)
Toxological properties
o At what dosage is it toxic
o Cancer causing?
Clinically effective
o It has to treat the disorder
Sources of new drugs?
1. Screening of natural products
o Approximately 50% of drugs in clinical use are derived
from natural products
o Plants/microbes/animals
o Amino acids (secondary metabolites)
o Peptides (venom)
o Plant:
Eg. willow bark used to treat fever in Cherokee
Indians acetylsalicylic acid
Eg. opium used as a pain suppressant
o Animals:
Eg. penicillin from mould (microbe)
2. Serendipity
o Drugs produced through accidents/good luck
o Eg. sildenafil (Viagra) was developed as a dilator of
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Document Summary

Key concepts in drug discovery: drug = any chemical substance (other than a nutrient or essential dietary ingredient) that brings about a change in biological function, nature of a disease, targets for drug action: A drug will not work unless its bound: most drugs exert their effects by binding to protein molecules: Ion channels eg. voltage gated na+ channels are inhibited by local anaesthetics that plugs the channel. Receptors (one of the main targets, specifically cell surface receptors) eg. parki(cid:374)so(cid:374)"s disease: binding to the receptor: Binding of a drug depends on physiochemical properties of a drug and its receptor: binding is reversible. How drugs act to alter the body function. It has to treat the disorder: sources of new drugs, screening of natural products, approximately 50% of drugs in clinical use are derived from natural products, plants/microbes/animals, amino acids (secondary metabolites, peptides (venom, plant: Eg. willow bark used to treat fever in cherokee.

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