Receptors & Ligands - Pharma's First Date
-
Receptor: Cellular macromolecule where drugs bind to initiate effects.
- Major Types:
- Ligand-gated ion channels (Ionotropic): Rapid; e.g., nAChR.
- G-protein coupled (GPCR/Metabotropic): Common; e.g., Adrenergic R.
- Enzyme-linked: e.g., Insulin R.
- Nuclear/Intracellular: Slowest; e.g., Steroid R.
- Major Types:
-
Ligand: Molecule binding to a receptor.
- Agonist: Binds & activates.
- Full: Max effect ($E_{max}$).
- Partial: Submaximal $E_{max}$; may antagonize full agonist.
- Inverse: Opposite effect to agonist.
- Antagonist: Binds & blocks; no intrinsic activity.
- Competitive: Reversible; ↑ apparent $K_D$ of agonist.
- Non-competitive: Irreversible/allosteric; ↓ $E_{max}$.
- Agonist: Binds & activates.
⭐ GPCRs are the largest receptor family, targeted by ~30-40% of modern drugs.
Drug-Receptor Dynamics - The Binding Story
- Drug ($D$) + Receptor ($R$) $\rightleftharpoons$ Drug-Receptor Complex ($DR$) $\rightarrow$ Response.
- Binding: Reversible, follows Law of Mass Action.
- Affinity: Tendency to bind receptor.
- Measure: $K_D$ (dissociation constant).
- $K_D = \frac{[D][R]}{[DR]}$
- ↓ $K_D$ = ↑ Affinity. $K_D$: [Drug] for 50% receptor occupancy.
- Efficacy (Intrinsic Activity): Ability to activate receptor after binding.
- Agonist: Affinity + Efficacy (e.g., Morphine).
- Antagonist: Affinity + Zero Efficacy (e.g., Naloxone).
- Partial Agonist: Affinity + Submaximal Efficacy.
- Inverse Agonist: Affinity + Negative Efficacy.
- Potency: Drug amount for a specific effect (e.g., $EC_{50}$ for 50% max effect).
- ↓ $EC_{50}$ = ↑ Potency.
- Reflects affinity & efficacy.

⭐ Antagonists possess affinity but have zero intrinsic activity (efficacy = 0). They do not produce a response on their own but block the action of agonists.
Dose-Response Curves - Curve Appeal
- Visualizes drug effect vs. dose/concentration.
- Graded DRC:
- Individual response; continuous effect.
- Log dose-response: Sigmoidal curve.
- Parameters:
- $E_{max}$: Maximum effect (Efficacy). ↑$E_{max}$ = ↑efficacy.
- $EC_{50}$: Concentration for 50% $E_{max}$ (Potency). ↓$EC_{50}$ = ↑potency.
- 📌 Potency = Position ($EC_{50}$); Efficacy = Elevation ($E_{max}$).
- Quantal DRC:
- Population response; all-or-none (e.g., cure, death).
- Parameters:
- $ED_{50}$: Dose effective in 50% population.
- $LD_{50}$: Dose lethal in 50% population.
- Therapeutic Index (TI): $LD_{50} / ED_{50}$. ↑TI = safer drug.
- Slope: Steep slope = small dose change, large response change.

⭐ Therapeutic Index (TI) is a measure of drug safety; a higher TI indicates a safer drug, representing a wider margin between effective and toxic doses.
Antagonism & Therapeutic Index - Block & Balance
- Antagonism: Process where one drug ↓ or prevents action of another.
- Competitive Antagonism:
- Binds agonist's receptor site.
- Reversible: Shifts Dose-Response Curve (DRC) right (↑ED₅₀), Eₘₐₓ unchanged. Surmountable by ↑agonist dose.
- Irreversible: Binds covalently. ↓Eₘₐₓ, not surmountable.
- Non-competitive Antagonism:
- Binds to allosteric site or different receptor. ↓Eₘₐₓ. Not surmountable.
- Physiological (Functional): Two drugs, opposite effects via different receptors (e.g., histamine & adrenaline).
- Chemical: Direct drug interaction (e.g., chelating agents with heavy metals).
- Competitive Antagonism:
- Therapeutic Index (TI) & Safety:
- TI: Measure of drug safety. $TI = \frac{TD_{50}}{ED_{50}}$ (Median Toxic Dose / Median Effective Dose).
- ↑TI = Safer drug.
- ⭐ > Drugs with low TI (e.g., Warfarin, Digoxin, Lithium, Phenytoin, Theophylline) require close monitoring. 📌 Remember: "Little Therapeutic Index Drugs Worry Physicians" (Lithium, Theophylline, Digoxin, Warfarin, Phenytoin).
- Therapeutic Window: Dose range between Minimum Effective Concentration (MEC) & Minimum Toxic Concentration (MTC).
- Certain Safety Factor (CSF): $CSF = \frac{LD_1}{ED_{99}}$. A more stringent safety index.

- TI: Measure of drug safety. $TI = \frac{TD_{50}}{ED_{50}}$ (Median Toxic Dose / Median Effective Dose).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Receptors are macromolecular targets for drugs, primarily proteins.
- Affinity (Kd) measures drug-receptor binding strength; lower Kd means higher affinity.
- Efficacy (Emax) is the maximal response a drug can produce.
- Potency (ED50/EC50) is the dose/concentration producing 50% of maximal effect.
- Agonists have affinity and efficacy; antagonists have affinity but no efficacy.
- Competitive antagonists shift Dose-Response Curve (DRC) right (↑ED50), surmountable by ↑agonist.
- Non-competitive antagonists reduce Emax (↓Emax) and are typically insurmountable.
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