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Receptor Theory & Toxicant-Receptor Interactions
Richard B. Mailman
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Some examples of receptors
1 E 2 R ligand b g a 2 Ion R ligand ligand nucleus R 3 ligand E R 4 ATP ADP P
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What is a receptor? To a neuroscientist
A protein that binds a neurotransmitter/modulator To a cell biologist or biochemist A protein that binds a small molecule A protein that binds another protein A nucleic acid that binds a protein To a toxicologist A macromolecule that binds a toxicant Etc.
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Definitions Affinity: Intrinsic activity (= “efficacy”): Potency:
the “tenacity” by which a ligand binds to its receptor Intrinsic activity (= “efficacy”): the relative maximal response caused by a drug in a tissue preparation. A full agonist causes a maximal effect equal to that of the endogenous ligand (or sometimes another reference compound if the endogenous ligand is not known); a partial agonist causes less than a maximal response. Intrinsic efficacy (outmoded): the property of how a ligand causes biological responses via a single receptor (hence a property of a drug). Potency: how much of a ligand is needed to cause a measured change (usually functional).
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Radioactivity Principles
Specific activity depends on half-life, and is totally independent of mode or energy of decay. When decay occurs for all of the biologically important isotopes (14C; 3H; 32P; 35S; 125I; etc.), the decay event changes the chemical identity of the decaying atom, and in the process, destroys the molecule on which the atom resided. e.g., 3H He Do NOT adjust the specific activity of your radiochemical based on decay – for every decay, there is a loss of the parent molecule.
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Drug-Receptor Interactions
Lgand-Receptor Complex Ligand + Receptor Response(s)
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Bimolecular Interactions: Foundation of Most Studies
Ligand-Receptor Complex Ligand + Receptor Response(s) At equilibrium: Rearrange that equation to define the equilibrium dissociation constant KD.
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Saturation Equations Michealis-Menten form Scatchard form
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Linear & Semilog Linear Plot Bound Semi-Log Plot Bound Free log [Free]
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Bound 20 40 60 80 100 Free Semi-Log Plot 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Bound -2 -1 1 2 log [Free]
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Saturation Equations Michealis-Menten form Scatchard form
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Saturation Radioreceptor Assays
preparation radiolabeled drug Tissue Preparation drug-receptor complex Beta Counter Filtration unbound labeled drug + unbound test drug
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Characterizing Drug-Receptor Interactions: Saturation curves
Total Binding 800 600 400 200 Specific Binding! (calculated) Amount Bound Non-Specific 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Radioligand Added (cpm x 1000)
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Saturation Equations Michealis-Menten form Scatchard form
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(Specific Binding/ Free Radioligand)
Scatchard plot -1/KD (Specific Binding/ Free Radioligand) B/F Bmax B (Specific Binding)
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Competition Radioreceptor Assays
preparation radiolabeled drug test drug Tissue Preparation drug-receptor complex Beta Counter Filtration unbound labeled drug + unbound test drug
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Competition Curve IC50 Total Binding (dpm *10, e.g.) log [ligand] (nM)
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Top Total Binding (dpm *10, e.g.) Specific Binding IC50 Bottom NSB 0.1 0.01 1.0 10 100 log [ligand] (nM)
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Calculations from Basic Theory (I)
25 50 75 100 90% Specific Binding (%) 10% 81 Fold 10-9 10-8 10-7 10-6 10-5 10-4 10-3 log [competing ligand] (M)
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Calculations from Basic Theory (II)
Commit this to memory!!!!! 25 50 75 100 91% Specific Binding (%) 9% 100-fold 10-9 10-8 10-7 10-6 10-5 10-4 10-3 log [competing ligand] (M)
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Competition Curves A B Specific Binding (%) Log [ligand] (nM) 100 90
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 A Specific Binding (%) B 0.1 0.01 1.0 10 100 1000 Log [ligand] (nM)
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A B C D Specific Binding (%) Concentration (nM) 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Specific Binding (%) A B C D 0.1 0.01 1.0 10 100 1000 Concentration (nM)
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Functional effects & antagonists
+ Increasing concentrations of antagonist B Raw Data 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 Control (agonist with no antagonist) Response (Fraction of maximal) -10 -11 -9 -8 -7 -6 Log Agonist Concentration (M)
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Spare receptors and “full agonists”
b g E2 a R E1 b g cAMP stimulation ???? ????
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Full & Partial Agonists
100 Full agonist 80 cAMP synthesis 60 (% stimulation relative to dopamine) Partial agonist 40 20 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 Concentration (nM)
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Functionally Selective Agonist
Ligand #1 Typical Agonist Ligand #2 Functionally Selective Agonist A B Normal Agonist F.S. Drug bg a bg Functional Complex #1 D2R a G-protein C D Functional Complex #2 No activation
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Ligand action on three pathways via a single receptor: Traditional view of “full” agonist
Therapeutic Effect 1 Side Effect 1 Side Effect 2
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Ligand action on three pathways via a single receptor: Traditional view of “partial” agonist
Therapeutic Effect 1 Side Effect 1 Side Effect 2
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Ligand action on three pathways via a single receptor: Traditional view of antagonist
Therapeutic Effect 1 Side Effect 1 Side Effect 2
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Activation of three pathways via a single receptor: “Functionally selective” compound
Therapeutic Effect 1 Side Effect 1 Side Effect 2
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Lessons of functional selectivity
Increases complexity in understanding mechanisms of toxicity. BUT …. provides opportunities to dissociate toxicity from therapeutic effects mediated via a single receptor. Universal to almost all targets for small molecules.
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