Introduction to Pharmacology and Toxicology- Biopharmaceuticals and gene therapy Flashcards

1
Q

What is a biological product?

A
  • Includes proteins, antibodies and oligonucleotides and their use as drugs
  • Use of nature to be used as therapeutic purposes
  • Product on the market in the laboratory or going through clinical trials
  • First and second generation biopharmaceuticals
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2
Q

What are first generation biopharmaceuticals?

A

Mainly copies of endogenous proteins or antibodies produced by recombinant DNA technology

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3
Q

What are second generation biopharmaceuticals?

A

Engineered to improve the performance of the protein or antibody

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4
Q

What is Recombinant DNA technology?

A
  1. The plasmid is inserted contains cDNA version of mRNA required for protein of interest
  2. Inserted into the bacteria
  3. Slow production of protein is formed
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5
Q

How are biopharmaceuticals designed and used? What is specifically looked at?

A
  1. Potency
  2. Specificity
  3. Side effects
    These are all the intrinsic properties that you need to target the receptors and transporters you’re interested in
  4. Delivery- get the intrinsic properties in to have an effect
    - Can’t be delivered orally (especially peptide/protein)- as the enzymes in stomach will break it down- poor bioavailability
  5. Can’t/difficult to cross the blood brain barrier- size may be too big- may require surgery
  6. Broken down by ubiquitous proteases- injected rapidly to be metabolised
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6
Q

What are the outside considerations you have to take into account for the production of biopharmaceuticals?

A
  1. Manufacture
    - Cost more to make than organic chemicals
    - Yields may be low
    - Purification- cows secrete protein into the milk
    - Quality control- pure product and not contaminated with anything that isn’t a therapeutic benefit
  2. Stability
    - Proteins often unstable= sensitive to heat and light etc- think about formulation and how to overcome these
    - Storage and shelf life is an issue
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7
Q

What are the different routes of administration for the different forms of insulins?

A
  1. Pulmonary delivery (aerosol, dry powder)- inhalation- inhaler
  2. Transdermal delivery (patches, creams and sprays)- across the skin- hydrophilic
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8
Q

What are the main intracellular targets for biopharmaceuticals?

A
  1. Mitochondrial/sub cellular targets- Lyosomal enzymes
  2. Nuclear targets- DNA and RNA binding proteins
  3. Cytoplasmic targets- kinases
  4. Intracellular pathogens- inhibitors or promoters of fusion
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9
Q

What are the Therapeutic Proteins?

A
  1. Peptide hormones- insulin, something to replace something missing which causes it to become dysfunctional
  2. Therapeutic enzymes
  3. Anti-bodies
  4. Extracted from natural sources
    - Pigs (insulins)
    - Human Cadavers (growth hormone)
  5. Recombinant DNA technology- insulin
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10
Q

What are the three examples of proteins that are used to replace a missing factor?

A
  1. Insulin (hormone)- replaces insulin in type I diabetics who have reduced ability to produce insulin
  2. Somatotropin (Hormone)- Growth hormone to prevent reduced stature- retarded growth
  3. Factor VIII (8) (Coagulation Factor)- For haemophilia replaces a missing clotting factor in the blood
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11
Q

What is the insulin used for, its mechanism of action, how is it administered and what are the types?

A

Indication: Type I diabetes mellitus

Mechanism of action: Insulin receptor agonist

Administration: Subcutaneous injections (pen devices)

Types: Short acting and long acting- long acting is used to increase half life.

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12
Q

How is insulin produced via recombinant DNA?

A
  1. Human pancreas cell has its insulin DNA producing gene cut out
  2. This is implemented into plasmid DNA that’s cut with restriction enzymes
  3. A recombinant DNA is created and implemented into a bacterium thats put into a fermentation tank
  4. Multiplying and producing human insulin- extraction and purification
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13
Q

What stimulates the production of red blood cells in treatment of chronic renal failure and anaemia in association with EPI deficiency?

A

Erthropoetin

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14
Q

What factor helps promote wound healing?

A

Platelet derived growth factor

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15
Q

What influences orthopaedic surgery, bone repair and promotes vertebral fusion?

A

Bone Morphogenic proteins

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16
Q

What factor influences hepatitis and multiple sclerosis?

A

Interferons

17
Q

What is the role of tPA?

A
  1. Turns plasminogen (inactive) to plasmin (active)

2. This encourages the Thrombus (blood clot) to turn into a proteolytic degradation product

18
Q

What are monoclonal antibodies?

A
1. Very specific antagonists
Y proteins
- bind to natural ligand- high degree of specificity
- neutralise effect
- may contain part of receptor
  1. Humanised antibodies
    - Overcome immune response
  2. Disease modifying agents

Example: Infliximab- treatment of Crohn’s disease

19
Q

What are nano bodies?

A

Anti-bodies that are much smaller in terms of size and can be used for difficult target- this may be drugs for different anti-bodies and individual ion channels.

20
Q

What is gene therapy?

A
  1. The replacement of a defective gene with a normal healthy gene itself
  2. The genetic modification of cells to prevent, alleviate or cure disease
21
Q

What are some examples of uses of gene therapy?

A
  1. The curing of monogenic diseases such as cystic fibrosis

2. Curing of neurodegenerative diseases and infectious diseases