Zaloguj się

Agonists are drugs that interact with specific receptors in the body to produce a biological response. When an agonist binds to a receptor, it activates or enhances the receptor's function, leading to physiological effects. The interaction between agonist drugs and receptors is crucial for their therapeutic action in various medical treatments.

Agonists can bind to receptors in different ways. Some agonists bind directly to the receptor's active site, mimicking the endogenous ligand's action. This results in the activation of the receptor and subsequent signal transduction within the cell. Other agonists may bind to allosteric sites on the receptor, modifying the receptor's conformation and enhancing its response to the endogenous ligand.

Understanding the interaction of agonist drugs with receptors is crucial for drug development and personalized medicine. Studying the interaction between agonists and receptors helps unravel the mechanisms underlying drug action and improve therapeutic strategies. Based on the affinity of agonists for a receptor and their efficacy in producing a response, agonists can be classified as full, partial, or inverse agonists.

For example, phenylepinephrine, a full agonist for α1-adrenoceptors, activates receptors in the nasal mucosa, causing vasoconstriction that helps reduce edema and congestion from the nasal cavity.

On the other hand, various partial agonists are used clinically to help with smoking and opiate addiction. Examples include buprenorphine and varenicline, which occupy all opiate and nicotinic receptors. These drugs activate their respective receptors sufficiently enough to stop the brain from craving their full agonists, heroin and nicotine, helping in the prevention of smoking and heroin consumption.

Inverse agonists mainly act on the receptors that show constitutive activity without a ligand. A recently developed drug, pimavanserin, an inverse agonist of the 5-HT2A receptor, treats hallucinations associated with Parkinson's disease.

Tagi
Drug receptor InteractionAgonistsBiological ResponseReceptor ActivationSignal TransductionTherapeutic ActionPersonalized MedicineDrug DevelopmentFull AgonistPartial AgonistInverse AgonistPhenylephrineBuprenorphineVarenicline5 HT2A Receptor

Z rozdziału 4:

article

Now Playing

4.12 : Drug-Receptor Interaction: Agonist

Pharmacodynamics

2.2K Wyświetleń

article

4.1 : Zasady działania narkotyków

Pharmacodynamics

5.5K Wyświetleń

article

4.2 : Cele działań w zakresie narkotyków: Przegląd

Pharmacodynamics

5.2K Wyświetleń

article

4.3 : Transdukcja sygnału: Przegląd

Pharmacodynamics

8.0K Wyświetleń

article

4.4 : Mechanizm przetwornika: receptory sprzężone z białkiem G

Pharmacodynamics

1.7K Wyświetleń

article

4.5 : Receptor kanału jonowego bramkowanego ligandem: mechanizm bramkowania

Pharmacodynamics

2.0K Wyświetleń

article

4.6 : Mechanizm przetwornika: receptory połączone z enzymami

Pharmacodynamics

2.2K Wyświetleń

article

4.7 : Mechanizm przetwornika: receptory jądrowe

Pharmacodynamics

1.2K Wyświetleń

article

4.8 : Zależność dawka-odpowiedź: Przegląd

Pharmacodynamics

2.7K Wyświetleń

article

4.9 : Zależność dawka-odpowiedź: siła działania i skuteczność

Pharmacodynamics

4.0K Wyświetleń

article

4.10 : Zależność dawka-odpowiedź: selektywność i swoistość

Pharmacodynamics

6.1K Wyświetleń

article

4.11 : Indeks terapeutyczny

Pharmacodynamics

3.9K Wyświetleń

article

4.13 : Interakcja lek-receptor: Antagonista

Pharmacodynamics

2.4K Wyświetleń

article

4.14 : Połączone działanie leków: antagonizm

Pharmacodynamics

7.5K Wyświetleń

article

4.15 : Połączone działanie leków: synergizm

Pharmacodynamics

3.1K Wyświetleń

See More

JoVE Logo

Prywatność

Warunki Korzystania

Zasady

Badania

Edukacja

O JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone