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The Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Dr. Ben T. Green Tuesday January 12, 2010
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Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

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Page 1: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

The Pharmacology of Plant

Toxins

Dr. Ben T. Green

Tuesday January 12, 2010

Page 2: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

What is Pharmacology?

• Defined as: The study of drugs, their sources, preparations, and therapeutic uses.

• Pharmacodynamics: The study of mechanisms underlying drug action in the body.

• Pharmacokinetics: The study of drug disposition in the body.

• Pharmacotherapeutics: The identification and development of clinical applications for drugs to palliate, prevent, or cure disease.

Page 3: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Drug-Receptor Interactions

• The interaction of a chemical (ligand) with

specific protein sites (receptors) either in

the cell or on its surface.

– Main classification of drugs.

• Agonist, a drug that produces a biological effect.

• Antagonist, a drug that opposes the actions of an

agonist.

Page 4: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Classes of Receptors

Levy, 2003

Page 5: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Pharmacological Definition of

ReceptorsThe receptor must allow for the recognition and binding of a drug

and must satisfy the following criteria:

•Saturability – receptors exists in finite numbers.

•Reversibility – binding must occur by weak intermolecular forces (H-bonding,

van der Waal forces).

•Stereoselectivity – receptors should recognize only one of the naturally

occurring optical isomers (+ or -, d or l, or S or R).

•Agonist specificity –related drugs should bind well, while physically dissimilar

compounds should bind poorly.

•Tissue specificity – Drug concentrations should be physiologically relevant

and binding should occur in in tissues known to be sensitive to the endogenous

ligand.

Page 6: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Concentration-Effect Relationships

of Agonists• Agonist activity is

correlated with its concentration at the receptor.

• This relationship can be plotted as a concentration-effect curve.

• Drug concentration is plotted on the x-axis against graded changes in the magnitude of drug effect on the y-axis.

Response

% M

axim

um

Log Drug Concentration

(Arbitrary Units)

EC50

20%

80%

50%

Page 7: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Affinity

• Affinity: The tenacity by which a drug binds to its receptor.

• KD (in moles/liter) expresses the affinity of a drug for a receptor.

– KD = [ligand] which occupies half the receptors.

• Determined by the use of radiolabelled (3H, 125I)-ligand.

• The KD is often lower than the concentration required to elicit a half-maximal biological response (EC50).

kon

[ligand] + [receptor] [ligand receptor]

koff

Levy, 2003

Page 8: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Efficacy

• Efficacy: also known as

“intrinsic activity”. The

ability of a drug to produce

a maximal biological

response relative to other

drugs. Expressed as Emax.

• Note, true antagonists

have no intrinsic efficacy.R

esponse

% M

axim

um

Log Drug Concentration

(Arbitrary Units)

Drug A

Drug B

Page 9: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Potency

• Potency: ability of a drug to

cause a measured

functional change relative to

other drugs.

• In isolated tissue or cell

based assays potency must

be expressed as the 50%

effective concentration

(EC50).

Log Drug Concentration

(Arbitrary Units)

Drug A

Drug BResponse

% M

axim

um

Page 10: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Dose

• The quantity of drug usually represented as milligram of drug per kilogram of body weight (mg/kg).

• The dose of a drug that cause a half maximal response in an organism is known as the 50% effective dose (ED50).

Response

% M

axim

um

Log Dose

(mg/kg)

ED50

20%

80%

50%

Page 11: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Affinities verses Potency of

Selected Agonists From Plants

Toxin Plant Affinity, Ki(nM) α7-nAChR

Potency(µM) α7-nAChR

Nicotine Common Tobacco

Nicotiana tabacum400 18

Anabasine Tree Tobacco

Nicotiana glauca58 16.8

Anabaseine Tree Tobacco

Nicotiana glauca58-759 6.7

Lobeline Indian Tobacco

Lobelia inflata11000 No Effect

Sharples, C. G. V., and S. Wonnacott. 2001. Neuronal nicotinic receptors. Tocris Reviews No. 19.

Page 12: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Drug Potencies Vary by Receptor

Type

Toxin Potency(µM) α7-nAChR

Potency(µM) α4β2-nAChR

Potency(µM) α3β4-nAChR

Nicotine 18 0.3 5

Anabasine 16.8 N.D. N.D.

Anabaseine 6.7 4.2 N.D.

Lobeline No

Activation

N.D. N.D.

Sharples, C. G. V., and S. Wonnacott. 2001. Neuronal nicotinic receptors. Tocris Reviews No. 19.

Page 13: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Cell-Based Assays

• TE-671 cells

– Express fetal human muscle-type nAChR

(α12β1γδ).

• SH-SY5Y cells

– Express autonomic type nAChRs containing

α3 and β4 subunits.

Page 14: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Teratogenic Activity Profile

• Piperidine alkaloids

• Carbon side chain of at least

three carbons or larger attached to

the carbon alpha to the piperidine

nitrogen increased teratogenic

activity.

• A methyl group attached to the

nitrogen reduced teratogenic

activity.

• A double bond at the nitrogen or

carbon side chain increases

teratogenic activity

Piperidine

Page 15: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Anabasine

• Piperidine Alkaloid

•Isolated from N. glauca (tree

tobacco)

•Agonist

•Present in the plant as a

racemate.

Page 16: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Anabaseine• Carnivorous marine worm toxin

• Potent at neuromuscular receptors.

• Double (imine) bond between positions 1 and

2 of the piperidine ring.

• Isolated and identified from Paranemertes

peregrina (purple ribbon worm).

Page 17: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Nicotine

• Pyridine Alkaloid

• N. tabacum

• Not very teratogenic

when compared to the

piperidine alkaloids.

Page 18: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Ammodendrine

• Lupinus Spp.

• Piperdine alkaloid

•Teratogenic in cattle

Page 19: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Relationship between potency,

percent maximum response, and

affinity of the teratogenic

alkaloids.

• Each figure presents the potency, and percent

maximal response and the affinity (estimated,

negative logarithm of the affinity value (pKa), of

the alkaloids in TE-671 cells (A) and SH-SY5Y

cells (B).

• Suggest the actions of these alkaloids are

efficacy dependent.

• High concentrations of affinity-dependent

agonists are required to produce a near

maximum biological response.

• Lower concentrations of efficacy-dependent

agonists can produce a near maximum

biological responses. Efficacy-driven agonists

would have a greater potential to produce fetal

defects at low concentrations relative to their

pKa value.

Page 20: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Competitive Antagonists

• Competitive antagonists

have no efficacy.

• These drugs compete

with agonists for the

binding of the same

receptor site to reduce

the potency of agonists.

• The effect of a

competitive antagonist

can be overcome by

excess agonist.

A = agonist alone

B = antagonist (one concentration)

A+B = agonist + antagonist

Levy, 2003

Page 21: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

Affinities of Selected Antagonists

From Plants.

Toxin Plant Affinity, Ki(nM) α7-nAChR

Affinity, Ki(nM) α4β2-nAChR

D-tubocurarine Chondodendron

tomenosum25000 13.9

Methyllycaconitine

(MLA)

Delphinium spp. 0.69 3700

Erysodine Erythrina spp. 4000 5

Dihydro-β-

erythroidine

Erythrina spp. 9000 3.2

Sharples, C. G. V., and S. Wonnacott. 2001. Neuronal nicotinic receptors. Tocris Reviews No. 19.

Page 22: Pharmacology of Plant Toxins Lecture : USDA ARS

MLA•Isolated from Delphinium

Spp. (Larkspur)

•Classified as an antagonist

•Lacks intrinsic

efficacy.

•Acts at nAChR.

-8.0 -7.5 -7.0 -6.5 -6.0 -5.5 -5.0 -4.5 -4.0 -3.50

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

110

MLA, Log [M]

Percen

t A

ctiv

atio

n

0 25 50 75 100 125 150 175 200 225 250 275300000

400000

500000

600000

700000

800000

MLA 40 mM KCl

Time (seconds)

Rela

tiv

e F

luo

rescen

ce U

nit

s