Medicines by Design: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Medicines by Design: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Medicines by Design: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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Medicines By Design
Pharmacology research
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
What Is NIGMS?
Discrimination Prohibited
Accessibility
Disclaimer
Trade names have been used throughout this
booklet to illustrate concepts about medicines
that are familiar to readers. The mention of
specic products is not an endorsement of their
use or effectiveness.
Additional Copies
and Web Links
To order additional copies of Medicines By Design
Medicines By Design
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
http://www.nigms.nih.gov
Contents
FO R E W O R D: A V I SI T T O T H E D O C T O R
C H A PTE R 1: A BC S O F P H AR MAC O LO GY
A Drugs Life
Perfect Timing
Fitting In
10
13
Pump It Up
14
C H A PTE R 2: BO DY, H E AL T H YS E LF
16
16
River of Life
18
20
23
A Closer Look
26
C H A PTE R 3: DR U GS F R O M N AT U R E , T H E N AN D N O W
28
28
Ocean Medicines
30
Tweaking Nature
33
Is It Chemistry or Genetics?
34
36
C H A PTE R 4: M O L EC U LE S T O ME D I C I N E S
38
Medicine Hunting
38
21st-Century Science
40
Rush Delivery
41
Transportation Dilemmas
43
44
The G Switch
46
M E DI C I NE S FO R TH E F U T U R E
48
GLO S SARY
50
to manufacture drugs.
CHAPTER 1
ABCs of Pharmacology
dispensing medicines.
you take.
joked that when she was asked what she did for a
A Juicy Story
Did you know that, in some people, a single glass
of grapefruit juice can alter levels of drugs used
to treat allergies, heart disease, and infections?
Fifteen years ago, pharmacologists discovered
this grapefruit juice effect by luck, after giving
volunteers grapefruit juice to mask the taste of a
medicine. Nearly a decade later, researchers g
ured out that grapefruit juice affects
medicines by lowering levels of a
drug-metabolizing enzyme, called
CYP3A4, in the intestines.
More recently, Paul B. Watkins of
the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill discovered that other juices like Seville
(sour) orange juicebut not regular orange
A Drugs Life
Inhaled
Oral
Lung
Heart
Liver
Kidney
Stomach
Intravenous
Intestines
Intramuscular
Subcutaneous
Transdermal
Skin
or lungs.
is going. To compensate,
precise measures of
Perfect Timing
Pharmacokinetics is an aspect of pharmacology
that deals with the absorption, distribution, and
excretion of drugs. Because they are following drug
actions in the body, researchers who specialize in
pharmacokinetics must also pay attention to an
additional dimension: time.
Pharmacokinetics research uses the tools of
mathematics. Although sophisticated imaging
10
Fitting In
Nerve Cell
Acetylcholine
Curare
Receptor
Muscle Cell
new medicines.
Effect on Body
Y-axis
Response
Desired
Effect
Dose-response curves
determine how much of
a drug (X-axis) causes
a particular effect, or a
side effect, in the body
(Y-axis).
Side
Effect
Dose
1
10
100
Amount of Drug
X-axis
12
A steroid is a molecule
with a particular chemical
structure consisting of
multiple rings (hexagons
and pentagon, below).
CH3
CH3
OH
Bench to Bedside:
Clinical Pharmacology
Prescribing drugs is a tricky science, requiring
physicians to carefully consider many factors.
Your doctor can measure or otherwise determine
many of these factors, such as weight and diet.
But another key factor is drug interactions. You
already know that every time you go to the doctor,
he or she will ask whether you are taking any other
drugs and whether you have any drug allergies or
unusual reactions to any medicines.
Interactions between different drugs in the
body, and between drugs and foods or dietary
supplements, can have a signicant inuence,
sometimes fooling your body into thinking
you have taken more or less of a drug than you
actually have taken.
Natures Drugs
Feverfew for migraines, garlic for heart disease,
St. Johns wort for depression. These are just a
few of the many natural substances ingested by
millions of Americans to treat a variety of health
conditions. The use of so-called alternative medi
cines is widespread, but you may be surprised to
learn that researchers do not know in most cases
how herbs workor if they work at allinside
the human body.
Herbs are not regulated by the Food and Drug
Administration, and scientists have not performed
careful studies to evaluate their safety and effec
tiveness. Unlike many prescription (or even
over-the-counter) medicines, herbs contain many
sometimes thousandsof ingredients. While some
14
Pump It Up
Bacteria have an uncanny ability to defend
LINDA S. NYE
Got It?
certain medicines?
an antagonist.
in the body?
CHAPTER 2
Discovery By Accident
The work of a scientist is often likened to locking
together the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Slowly and
methodically, one by one, the pieces t together to
make a pretty picture. Research is a puzzle, but the
jigsaw analogy is awed. The truth is, scientists
dont have a puzzle box to know what the nished
picture is supposed to look like. If you know the
result of an experiment ahead of time, its not really
an experiment.
Being a scientist is hard work, but most researchers
love the freedom to explore their curiosities. They test
ideas methodically, nding answers to new problems,
and every day brings a new challenge. But researchers
must keep their eyes and ears open for surprises. On
occasion, luck wins out and breakthroughs happen
by accident. The discovery of vaccines, X rays, and
penicillin each came about when a scientist was willing
to say, Hmmm, I wonder why and followed up on
an unexpected nding.
your father.
Want a CYP?
Your body is a model of economy. Metabolism
your bodys way of making energy and body
parts from food and water takes place in every
cell in every organ. Complex, interlocking path
ways of cellular signals make up metabolism,
linking together all the systems that make
your body run. For this reason, researchers
have a tough time understanding the
process, because they are often faced
with studying parts one by one or a
few at a time. Nevertheless, scientists
have learned a lot by focusing on
individual metabolic pathways,
such as the one that manufactures
important regulatory
molecules called
prostaglandins
(see page 21).
Important enzymes called cytochrome
P450s (CYP, pronounced sip, 450s) process
essential molecules such as some hormones
and vitamins. The CYP 450 enzymes are
a major focus for pharmacologists because
18
River of Life
Since blood is the bodys primary internal trans
portation system, most drugs travel via this route.
Medicines can nd their way to the bloodstream
in several ways, including the rich supply of blood
Blood Vessel
Nerve
Hair Follicle
Sweat Gland
Fat
20
Salicylate
Acetylsalicylate
(Aspirin)
22
joints hurt.
24
as non-self, like a
front-line agents.
other organs.
Researchers are also investigating a new kind of
vaccine as therapy for diseases such as cancer.
The vaccines are not designed to prevent cancer,
plague humankind.
26
A Closer Look
of blood.
Got It?
Dene metabolism.
What is a technique
scientists use to study
a proteins threedimensional structure?
CHAPTER 3
Natural Cholesterol-Buster
Having high cholesterol is a signicant risk factor
for heart disease, a leading cause of death in the
industrialized world. Pharmacology research has
made major strides in helping people deal with
this problem. Scientists Michael Brown and
Joseph Goldstein, both of the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, won the
1985 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for
their fundamental work determining how the
body metabolizes cholesterol. This research, part
of which rst identied cholesterol receptors, led to
the development of the popular cholesterol-lowering
statin drugs such as Mevacor and Lipitor.
New research from pharmacologist David
Mangelsdorf, also at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, is pointing
to another potential treatment for high cholesterol.
The new substance has the tongue-twisting
name guggulsterone, and it isnt really new at all.
Guggulsterone comes from the sap of the guggul
tree, a species native to India, and has been used
in Indias Ayurvedic medicine since at least 600
B.C. to treat a wide variety of ailments, including
obesity and cholesterol disorders. Mangelsdorf
30
Ocean Medicines
invertebrate animals.
Miracle Cures
CHRISTINE L. CASE
A penicillin-secreting Penicillium
mold colony inhibits the growth
of bacteria (zig-zag smear growing
on culture dish).
Yondelis is an experimental
cancer drug isolated from
the marine organism
Ecteinascidia turbinata.
PHARMAMAR
32
Prospecting Biology?
Tweaking Nature
against disease.
34
Is It Chemistry or Genetics?
Regardless of the way researchers nd new
medicines, drug discovery often takes many unex
pected twists and turns. Scientists must train their
eyes to look for new opportunities lurking in the
outcomes of their experiments. Sometimes, side
trips in the lab can open up entirely new avenues
of discovery.
Take the case of cyclosporine, a drug
discovered three decades ago that suppresses the
immune system and thereby prevents the body from
rejecting transplanted organs. Still a best-selling
medicine, cyclosporine was a research breakthrough.
The drug made it possible for surgeons to save the
lives of many critically ill patients by transplanting
organs. But its not hard to imagine that the very
properties that make cyclosporine so powerful in
putting a lid on the immune system can cause
serious side effects, by damping immune function
too much.
Years after the discovery of cyclosporine,
researchers looking for less toxic versions of this
drug found a natural molecule called FK506 that
seemed to produce the same immune-suppressing
Blending Science
These days, its hard for scientists to know what
to call themselves. As research worlds collide in
wondrous and productive ways, the lines get blurry
when it comes to describing your expertise. Craig
Crews of Yale University, for example, mixes a com
bination of molecular pharmacology, chemistry, and
genetics. In fact, because of his multiple scientic
curiosities, Crews is a faculty member in three
different Yale departments: molecular, cellular, and
developmental biology; chemistry; and pharma
cology. You might wonder how he has time to get
anything done.
Hes getting plenty doneCrews is among a
new breed of researchers delving into a growing
scientic area called chemical genetics (see main
text). Taking this approach, scientists use chemistry
to attack biological problems that traditionally have
been solved through genetic experiments such as
the genetic engineering of bacteria, yeast, and mice.
Crews goal is to explore how natural products
work in living systems and to identify new targets
for designing drugs. He has discovered how an
36
health problem?
Got It?
CHAPTER 4
Molecules to Medicines
Medicine Hunting
While sometimes the discovery of potential medi
drug delivery.
WHO/TDR/STAMMERS
characteristic of gout.
Current estimates indicate that scientists
have identied roughly 500 to 600 molecular
targets where medicines may have effects in
the body. Medicine hunters can strategically
discover drugs by designing molecules to hit
these targets. That has already happened in some
40
21st-Century Science
hinge on biology.
Rush Delivery
as drug delivery.
42
Protein
Phosphorylated Protein
Protein Kinase
ATP
ADP
the intestines.
Amidon and other researchers discovered that
certain medicines, such as the antibiotic penicillin
and certain types of drugs used to treat high blood
Transportation Dilemmas
Scientists are solving the dilemma of drug delivery
44
gene therapy.
Anesthesia Dissected
Scientists who study anesthetic medicines
have a daunting task for the most part,
they are shooting in the dark when
it comes to identifying the molecular
targets of these drugs. Researchers do
know that anesthetics share one common
ingredient: Nearly all of them somehow
target membranes, the oily wrappings
surrounding cells. However, despite the
fact that anesthesia is a routine part of
surgery, exactly how anesthetic medicines
work in the body has remained a mystery for more
than 150 years. Its an important problem, since
anesthetics have multiple effects on key body func
tions, including critical processes such as breathing.
Scientists dene anesthesia as a state in which
no movement occurs in response to what should
be painful. The problem is, even though a patient
loses a pain response, the anesthesiologist cant
tell what is happening inside the persons organs
and cells. Further complicating the issue, scientists
know that many different types of drugswith
46
The G Switch
(b)
(a)
(c)
Hormone
Plasma Membrane
Receptor
Active G Protein
Cell Response
more signals.
Got It?
What is a liposome?
Describe how
G proteins work.
48
Careers in Pharmacology
Wanna be a pharmacologist? If you choose pharma
cology as a career, here are some of the places you
might nd yourself working:
College or University. Most basic biomedical
research across the country is done by scientists
at colleges and universities. Academic pharma
cologists perform research to determine how
medicines interact with living systems. They also
teach pharmacology to graduate, medical, pharmacy,
veterinary, dental, or undergraduate students.
Pharmaceutical Company. Pharmacologists
who work in industry participate in drug develop
ment as part of a team of scientists. A key aspect
of pharmaceutical industry research is making
sure new medicines are effective and safe for use
in people.
Hospital or Medical Center. Most clinical pharma
cologists are physicians who have specialized
training in the use of drugs and combinations of
50
Glossary
ADME | Abbreviation for the four steps in a
of biological data.
basic research.
52
synthesis of prostaglandins.
Neurotransmitter | A chemical messenger that
allows neurons (nerve cells) to communicate with
each other and with other cells.
Nucleus | The membrane-bound structure
within a cell that contains most of the cells
genetic material.
Organelle | A specialized, membrane-bound
structure that has a dened cellular function;
for example, the nucleus.
Peptide | A small protein fragment.
Pharmacodynamics | The study of how drugs
act at target sites of action in the body.
Pharmacogenetics | The study of how peoples
genes affect their response to medicines.
on pharmacology.
organisms function.
Sepsis | A clinical condition in which infectious
Prostaglandins | Any of a class of hormonelike, fat-soluble, regulatory molecules made from
fatty acids such as arachidonic acid; prostaglandins
54
What Is NIGMS?
Discrimination Prohibited
Accessibility
Disclaimer
Trade names have been used throughout this
booklet to illustrate concepts about medicines
that are familiar to readers. The mention of
specic products is not an endorsement of their
use or effectiveness.
Additional Copies
and Web Links
To order additional copies of Medicines By Design
AT T E N T I O N R E A D E R S
2.
Understandability
3.
4.
Medicines By Design
Pharmacology research
2.
Address
State
3.
Zip Code
E-mail (optional)
Phone (optional)
Other Comments:
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
City
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES