Module - 5 Notes
Module - 5 Notes
Module - 5 Notes
Nervous System
Nervous system can have either:
1. Neurons(nerve cells)
These are excitable meaning they can convey information through action potentials
from one to the other part of the body. Part of the distal signalling system.
2. Glial cells
Support neurons physically, immunologically (defend from pathogens), and
metabolically(supply nourishment and remove the metabolic waste from brain)
Dendrites collect information from the surrounding axon terminals or take in the nerve
impulse initated by the central nervous system itself.
Neurone features:
Cell body: Contains nucleous and most of the cell organelles. Integrate incoming signal
and generate outgoing signal to axon.
Dendrites: Shrub like projections that extend from the cell body. Collect electrical
signals.
Axon: A projection that is longer than dendrites. Carry action potential
away from the cell body.Pass electric signals to dendrites of another cell or to an
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effector cell.
Axon terminals: Swollen tips of the nerve ending at the end of axons. Places from where
impulse passes from one neuron to the other.
Differential gene expression allows the body to form different types of specialized
neurons.
Brain and spinal cord → Central nervous system (CNS), Driving all sort of
processes like driving, movement, etc. Responsible for all voluntary actions (some
involuntary too).
Neurons extending or residing out the brain and spinal cord and their supporting
cells → Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
Sensory neurons = Afferent neurons → carry sensory information into nervous system.
Sense information and carry it to CNS.
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Motor neurons = Efferent neurons → Carry commands from CNS to physiological and
behavioral effectors such as muscles and glands.
Interneurons → Integrate and store information and communicate between afferent and
efferent neurons.
Glial Cells
1. Oligodendrocytes:
Insulate axons of neurons in CNS
2. Schwann cells
Insulate axons in PNS through myelination
3. Astrocytes
Contribute to blood brain barrier through myelination
4. Microglia
Can invite macrophages and are involved in the immunological defence of the brain
Neurons insulated by myelin sheaths can conduct action potential at high rates. They
also ensure that the action potential is not impacted by the touching of any external
neurons.
In which system destroys myelin sheaths in some regions of CNS, which significantly
decreases the rate of propogation of nerve impulse
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Astrocytes (Learn these properties)
a. Contribute to forming the blood brain barrier which ensures no harmful chemical
reaches the brain. (btw antibodies dont go into the brain)
c. Permeable to fat soluble substances such as anesthetics and alcohol, that’s how
they put your brain to sleep
Microglia
a. Act as macrophages i.e. macrophages can go to a pathogen, eat it, and take it
away so it doesn’t impact neurons.
Electric Signals
Membrane potential:
the difference in electrical charge between the inside and the outside of a cell (across a
membrane)
Resting potential:
Represent the normal resting state of the cell until when the action potential has not
arrived.
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1. Intracellular conditions are negative due to the presence of large anions, such as
proteins inside the cell. ( NOT due to chlorine ions, as in fact, they are high in
concentration outside the cell )
3. Sodium-Potassium pump
Primarily responsible for mainting the potentials. Sends 3 Na+ outside and 2K+
inside the cell using ATP by active transport.
Negative molecules attract K+ from moving outside. When this factor equates that of K+
leaking outside through electrochemical gradient, we achieve the resting potential
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Action potential
Sudden, large, transiet reversal in restig potential generated by sudden oepning and
rapid closing of ion channels.
Once an action potential from nearby cells arrives, the Na+ voltage-gated channels
open. Note that there needs to be a certain threshold level of this potential around
these channels for them to open. If the threshold is surpassed, the voltage-gated Na+
channels open, allowing more Na+ to move inside down the potential gradient. This
rapidly depolarizes the cell as more and more Na+ voltage gated channels not start
having experiencing enough voltage to surpass the threshold level and open.
This causes a spike in the membrane potential, with it rising up to 50mV from about -60
to -70mV
One the potential has reached 50mV, the voltage-gated Na+ channels close, and the
voltage-gated K+ channels open. These channels now allow K+ to move down the
concentration outside the cell, making the inside of the cell negative again, and this is
called repolarization . This channel allows even more K+ to move outside than the Na+
that entered the cell, taking the cell into a potential even below that of the resting. This
phenomenon is called hyperpolarization.
Once hyperpolarization occurs, voltage-gated K+ too close. With this, the Na-K pump
still working restores the resting potential.
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Types of Ion transporters and Channels
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1. Na-K pump (described above)
2. K+ leak channel
4. Voltage-gated Na+ channel → Only open and allow Na+ to move inside down the
potential gradient when an action potential arrives.
1. Voltage gated → changes in voltage around the channel can allow it to open
3. Mechanically gated → Open due to some physical influence e.g. the Venus Flytrap
plant uses its mechanisms
In short
Resting potential is maintained by → Na+ leaky, K+ leaky, and Na-K pump
Action potential occurs when → Na+ voltage gated channels open causing
depolarization i.e. the potential becomes less negative
Hyperpolarization → K+ voltage gated channels open, and K+ moves outside. In fact,
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even more K+ moves outside than Na+ had entered, momentarily leading to a potential
even lower than the resting.
Na+ voltage gated channels go into a refractory phase once they close i.e. they can not
be opened again until a short period of time. This is essential to ensure that the action
potential travels in a single pathway.
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How do neurons communicate with other cells?
We use neurotransmitters → chemicals or molecules which can transfer a signal from
one neuron to the other.
Synapse → A specific type of junction where a neuron meets its target cell and
information in the form of a neurotransmitter molecule is exchanged.
2. Ca2+ pushes the neurotransmitter vesicles containing acetylcholine outside the cell
3. Acetylcholine travels across the junction to the acetylcholine receptors on the post-
synaptic membrane.
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4. Activation of these receptors causes chemically-gated Na+ channels to open so
Na+ rushes inside the post-synaptic membrane, making it depolarized as well. So
by now, the action potential has been transferred across the neuron.
Neuromuscular junction:
Neuron-Neuron junction:
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There can be different types of neurotransmitters:
1. Excitatory
2. Inhibitory
Open either Cl- ir K+ channels (More chlorine inside the cell, or less K+ outside the
cell, both ensure the cell remains polarized and negative)
Suppresses firing→ Less depolarization
e.g. GABA, Glysin
It is also necessary to turn of the responses once they’ve occurred, so responses could
be generated again if need be.
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So, to remove the neurotransmitter from the synaptic cleft:
2. They can also be taken up by active transporters on the membrane by Glial cells
(we can change this uptake through drugs)
Microbiology
Differences:
1. Prokaryotic cells use binary fission to divide. Eukaryots use mitosis and meiosis
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Most of the eukaryotes don’t have cellulase to digest cellulose but use indigenous
bacteria to do so.
Nitrogen fixation in plants is dependent on bacteria
Particular strains of the microbes can induce autoimmune diseases
They can also produce essential metabolic products
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Microbes also provide Cofactors → Certain small chemicals which are required for
functioning of enzymes. Like DNA polymerase requires Magnesium as a cofactor to
work.
They can also metabolize food, or stimulate immune responses when attacking other
organisms
Eating antibiotics can disrupt microbial populations in our body
Fungi
More complex than bacteria, and is a eukaryote since it contains membrane-bound
organelles
Bacteria
Has much more RNA than DNA. (That’s why we added RNAase in bio100 when
isolating plasmids from a bacterial culture)
Bacteria can come in different sizes and shapes
They can be motile only if they have flagella
Classifying bacteria:
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It acts as a barrier to prevent osmotic pressure from building up and bursting the
bacteria if the water potential is too high outside of the bacteria.
Many antibiotics(e.g. β -lactam antibiotics) impact the bacterial cell wall to inhibit its
functioning and kill the bacteria. Note that these antibiotics don’t impact any of our cells
since they don’t have any cell wall to begin with.
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Gram-Negative cell wall
2. Has lipopolysaccharides
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Gram-positive cell wall:
2. No lipopolysachaide
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Gram-positive cells retain the dye due to this thick PG and No lipopoly
Glycocalyx: Capsule Slime layer and S-layer (Present outside the cell wall)
→ Layer of polysaccharide extending from the surface. It can either be in the form of a
i. Capsule→ Can not be washed
ii. Slime layer → Can be wahsed (imp)
→ Made of sugars
→ Protects against drying i.e. even if the water starts moving out of the cell, there will
always be some of it left due to a protective mechanism by glycocalyx
→Protects against immune response (the layer contains certain sets of glycoprotein
which help the bacteria to mimic as a resident glycoprotein, so our immune system
sometimes fails to recognize this bacteria as a pathogen)
→ An important virulence factor i.e. increases bacteria’s pathogenicity
Bacterium motility-Flagella
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Pili →Allow bacteria to attatch to each other to share genetic material b/w them
Fimbriae → Slightly shorter than pili and allow bacteria to attatch to a substrate
Viruses
Obligate intracellular species i.e. will always be infectious if they attack, and infect
only if they reach the inside of the cell.
They are acellular i.e. they can’t make ATP
1. Matrix proteins
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(Shape of capsid depends on nucleic acids inside the capsid)
Envelope
Budding:
So you can see from here how the envelope of a virus is that of a membrane
Envelope also allows the virus to ext the cell without killing it
(Lytic cycle of a virus → Kill the host cell as it leaves
Lysogeny cycle → Virus stays inside the host cell and uses its machinery
So having an envelope can prevent the lysis from happening)
Contains atleast one virally encoded protein
Viruses are very small, and can be visualized usually under electron microscopes only.
2. Anthropods
3. Animals
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Can be differentiated based on their genome
DNA viruses
RNA viruses→ further into→ +Strand RNA viruses(running 5’→3’,can be converted into
a protein directly) or -Strand RNA viruses(running 3’→5’, needs to be first converted to
apositive-strandd before into a protein)
3. Virus will now uncoat (the capsid will wear off and the nucleic acids, transcription
factor, replicases etc will move out)
4. The biosynthesis → virus will hijack the host’s protein translational machinery
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6. New viral particles made and released into the extracellular fluid. (It won’t kill the
cell while moving outside only if the virus has an envelope)
Influenza Virus
3. Undergoes extensive genetic variation (makes sense why we keep getting flu)
(Imp)
Genetic Shift: e.g. the Influenza virus from a human and a duck combines in
another specie to form a new reassorted form of this virus.
Immunology
Study of the cells and tissues that mediate immunity and the investigating of genes and
proteins underlying their functions
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Two types of immune systems:
1. Innate
ALWAYS present and ready inside our bodies to defend against pathogen
Antigen non-specific → there for and attacks all types of pathogens without fully
differentiating the pathogens. That said, they can detect some specific patterns.
Rapid response
No memory → have the same response even if the same pathogen attacks the 1st
or the 100th time(primary response)
Present from birth
2. Adaptive
Antigen specific → very specific in detecting pathogens
Slow in response → takes some time to kick in this immune system after the
pathogen attacks (is a secondary response)
Memory → once you’ve been infected by some pathogen, the body will be ready to
counter this pathogen in a better way if it attacks in.
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All these different cell types come from totipotent stem cells, being specialized at each
stage.
Cells of the Two Immune Systems
1. Macrophages and Neutrophils are phagocytes that can engulf foreign cells by
phagocytosis. Form part of the innate immunity
3. T Cell receptors
Recognize and bind to antigen presented by the MHC proteins on the surface of
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other cells. Usually the first step to an immune response
4. Cytokines
Soluble signalling proteins that bind to cell surface receptor and alter their behavior
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4. Lysosomal enzymes digest the particles, leaving a residual body
1. Phagocytes
>Circulate freely or adhere to certain tissue
>Infected cells, viruses, or their fragments recognized by phagocytes
>Chemicals present in phagocytes → Defensins, nitric oxide and reactive oxygen
intermediates kill pathogens
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>Initiate apoptosis (programmed cell death in target cells
3. Dendritic Cells (like a bridge b/w the innate and adaptive immune system)
>Present antigenic fragments on their surface. This allows the information to be
conveyed to the adaptive immune system for the secondary response to now take
place
>Activate the adaptive immune system
Inflammation
Involves the recruitment of cells and molecules, primarily pro-inflammatory cytokines
The body Isolates the damaged area to stop the spread
2. Their cytoplasmic granules contain Granzyme and Perforin which are delivered
directly into the target cells to kill it
So a natural killer cell has both an activation receptor and an inhibitory receptor.
Whenever it attacks a target cell, if its inhibitory receptor detects an MHC I present on
the target cell, it means it’s a self cell so NK calms down and does nothing. If however, it
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detects a target cell without the MHC I, the NK cells release perforin and granzymes
into this target cell to kill it as it believes it has intracellular toxic parasites(e.g. viruses).
This is how it differentiates between an infected and a healthy cell.
Antigen
A substance that induces an immune response by stimulating cell immune cells (mostly
detected due to their conformational or sequential form)
> They can be large complexes
> Presented by specific molecules on the surface of antigen-presentinge cells called
MHC
i. Activate B cells to produce antibodies, which act on the free antigens or on the
infected/pathogenic cell directly. (Note that these B cells could have directly
recognized the free antigens with their antibody receptors on their surface)
ii. Activate T killer cells to bind and kill the pathogenic cell by apoptosis by releasing
perforin or granzyme into the cell
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The pathogenic cell as well as a dendritic cell displaying antigens of a non-self cell does
it through MHC II
Inductive Adaptive Immunity
Induction can occur by two overlapping mechanisms (imp)
1. Cellular
>Based on cell-mediated responses from T-lymphocytes to kill cells. Requires a
direc cell-to-cell contact as the T cells need to travel to the infected cell/pathogen
>Detect mainly intracellular pathogens
2. Humoral
>Based upon antibodies from B lymphocytes. No direct cell-to-cell contact needed
>Detect mainly extracellular pathogens
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T cells
>Develop and mature in (T)hymus
>Express T cell receptors on their surface
>Upon activation differentiate into T-helper and T-cytotoxic cells
Clonal Selection
The different types of B cells are there for different types of antigens, but once the
antigen reinfects you, it will lead towards proliferation of certain types of B cells i.e. B
cells are specfic for different types of antigens. Once a certain antigen is detected by
the B cell, that specific B cell will proliferate so there are multiple B cells against that
type of antigen
Clonal Deletion
Any immature B or T cell that shows the potential to mount immune response against
self antigens is eliminated
Cancer
Cancer is a large group of diseases characterized by the uncontrolled growth and
spread of abnormal cells
Abnormal cells can grow into disorganized mass of cells → Tumour
Tumour can either be
1. Non-cancerous (Benign)
Cancer is localized, and the uncontrolled division stops after some period
2. Cancerous (Malignant)
Cancer can spread from one part of the body to the other, and the cells keep
dividing abnormally.
Normally, each cell keeps receiving a signal which tells it to divide, and if something
goes wrong the cell receives an apoptotic signal telling it to die.
But tumour cells have an abnormal growth. They don’t need any growth signal to
survive so can undergo rapid and uncontrolled growth.
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Carcinoma → epithelial cancer
Sarcomas→ Bone and muscle connective tissue cancer
Leukemia → Blood cancer
Lymphoma → Lymphocytes cancer
Cancer can come from just a single cell that underwent abnormal procedures which
then divides into a lump and spread if malignant. The cancer mass can also form
different layers.
When a malignant cancer starts to spread through the bloodstream, T killer cells detect
and kill many of these cancer cells. However, often some of the cancer cells survive and
reach some other part of the body whereby they start dividing again. This transfer of
cancer cells from one region to the other is called
metastases
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Somatic cell mutations actually result in carcinomas, germ cell mutations are dangerous
for your offsprings, but not you.
Not all carcinogens are mutagens → i.e. it is not necessary for cancer to occur only
through a mutation; rather, there can be other reasons as well.
Hallmarks of cancer
1. Sustaining proliferative signalling → only one signal is enough for a cell to keep
dividing
2. Evading growth repressors → They will continue to grow even in the presence of
growth repressors
4. Enabling replicative immortality → they are immortal, they’ve solved the telomer
problem
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How do mutations cause tumourigenesisns? (imp)
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> In short, failure of apoptotic signals to stop the cell growth
Normally, a ligand attatching to a receptor would activate the cascade leading to further
actions. In cancer, whether the ligand is attatched or not, the receptor stays active (i.e.
constitutively active → oncogene)
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Inactivation of tumour suppressor gene
Can either be due to
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The p53 alarm system
p53 is called the guardian of the genome!
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Hyerproliferative signals, DNA damage, telomere shortening, and hypoxia(shortening of
oxygen) can all activate the p53 which then causes the cell cycle to i) be arrested so no
faulty DNA is passed on, ii) or senescence i.e. the cell becomes a terminally
differentiated cell to prevent further divisions when telomere has greatly shortened iii) or
apopotosis if hypoxia or DNA damage has become too severe
Oncogene activation
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3. Gene amplification → gene copy number increases and a normal protein is greatly
produced
4. Chromosome rearrangement
i) Nearby regulatory sequence causes normal protein to be overproduced (e.g. a
constitutively active promoter region)
ii)Fusion to actively transcribed gene produces hyperactive protein (e.g. the
GTP isn’t hydrolysed anymore, and RAS is constitutively active causing cell divisions.
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Self-explanatory
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Drug development
Treatment of cancers:
Surgery → physically remove the tumour before it becomes malignant
Radio and Chemotherapy → uses medicines and radiation to stop cells having very
rapid cell divisions (so often hairfall occurs as cells around hair follicles are rapidly
dividing). Most drugs work by not allowing microtubules to perform in anaphase to stop
cell cycles.
Targeted/Personalized Therapy → Every person has a different mutation, so we can
pinpoint mutations and design drugs specifically for that person. With this we can
prevent side-effects and make our drug more effective overall
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Target Identification → Find a molecule that is integral to to the cell. Like inhibiting
which protein in a cancer cell will lead to decreased tumour growth etc. We can find
such targets by comparing sequences of healthy and cancer cells; if all cancer cells
seem to be expressing a gene while the healthy ones don’t, that one protein is definitely
doing something to support the cancer growth
Target Validation → Take that specific sequence and express that protein etc. we
found above (which is as we are saying only active in cancer cells) in multiple healthy
cells. If the protein causes the healthy cells to become cancerous, the protein was
definitely a good target.
Assay Development (testing the drug) → Let’s say we have about a thousand drugs to
test against this protein, which is a kinase. What we can do is to test our drugs and
monitor ATP levels. If increasing our drug concentration causes the concentration of
ATP to decline at a decreasing rate, it means the protein is being inhibited as it is a
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kinase and kinases use ATP to work.
We can screen large amounts of drugs at the same time.
Ex-vivo testing (living cells but outside the organism) → What phenotypes can you
expect in your cells upon the addition of drug. In our case of cancer, we will expect
slower cell division and increased apoptosis.
In-vivo testing (testing living cells inside the organism) → We never know the cells
might behave differently inside the conditions of an organism
Target Identification
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>Genechips/Microarrays → help in identify genes being under or overexpressed
>Proteomics → Which protein is being expressed more (or less)
>Karyotype → Checks chromosomal abnormalities (e.g. cancer cells often increase
their chromosome number)
>Detect mutations
>Check aberrant DNA methylation patterns → tumour suppressor genes could be
silenced by methylation
All this can help us identify possible disease causing molecules.
The slide shows there can be multiple levels in a pathway that could have become
constitutively active, so we can inhibit any one of them to stop the pathway.
Protein kinases as drug targets for cancer
>Good drug targets for cancer since they are often mutated in cancers, and they have a
certain ATP binding pocket which can be inhibited.
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Types as mentioned in the slide
i)Tyrosine specific → only phosphorylate tyrosine specific kinases
ii)Serine/Threonine
iii)Dual specific → can phosphorylate either Kinase and serine or kinase and threonine
residues
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So Bcr gene from chromosome 22, and AbI gene from chromosome 9 can both
translocate and form a philadelphia chromosome containing fused Bcr/Abi gene which
when transcripted and translated into a protein, forms a constitutively active kinase→so
keeps phosphorylation its residues which can lead to increased cell proliferation
Target Validation
Selection for cancer
i)Deregulating the target linked to a clinical outcome i.e. impacting the target alters does
alter outcomes in the best possible way
ii) There should preferably be present a suitable drug/complementary structure that
could detect and inhibit the target
iii) Preferable if you can inhibit that target’s interaction with DNA or protein which leads
to cancer or some other disease
iv) Manipulation of target in a living model system causes malignant phenotype (imp)
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Assay Development
(For a kinase target, if adding the drug increases ADP concentration it means it is
increasing the drug’s ATP)
Testing of drugs can either be
Biochemical Assay (in vitro) i.e. testing in living cells but outside organisms e.g.
in test tubes
Advantages:
>Well defined and easy to control environmental
>Clean environment as external proteins, conditions, solution etc. is under our control.
No random molecule is playing its part
Issues:
>Solubility of proteins often not possible → can have hydrophobic exterior
>Not physiological i.e. you never know how all the external conditions in a real organism
are playing their part.
Issues:
>Messy → alot of other proteins, and extrnal influences are playing their part as well
>Low signal in some cases due to noise since our drug might also be interacting with
alot of other proteins
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Generic.
1. Fewer than five hydrogen bond donors (estimate by counting the total number of
OH and NH groups in the molecule)
2. Fewer than 10 hydrogen bond acceptors (estimated by the total of N and O atoms)
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Like this molecule has 2 hydrogen bond donors, and 3 hydrogen bond acceptors
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Kinetics part → What your body is doing to the drug
Dynamics part → What drug does to your body
ADMETox properties
Absorption → Passes the drug from Gastro-Intestinal track into the blood stream →
should be higher (Kinetics, body is absorbing)
Metabolism → should not be readily metabolized (but not too slow that it starts
accumulating) (kinetics)
Clinical Trials
Pre-clinical testing → before entering a living organism (or at most in the mouse)
Go to FDA
Phase I → prefer on doing patients on life sentences → determining safety and dosage
Phase III → Verify effectiveness and monitor long-term use side effects
(The sample size of patients keeps increasing along the phases)
Now the FDA might approve one out of the millions of compounds evaluated.
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Gleevec works against the Bcr-Abi constitutively active protein kinase, by attaching itself
on the ATP pocket of the kinase, inhibiting it from phosphorylating residues and the cell
from proliferating
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