MattPsy
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,616
Okay, so i've been interested in pharmcol for a while now. But it's come to my attention that I still don't understand what Ki and a few other values actually /mean/ (but understood the /implications/ of them, so could still design molecules to do things), as well as how they are found for new compounds and the like - quite a deficit, that i'd like to correct to further my understanding.
I can't ask a tutor or whatnot as i'm just a 18yo student and so are still only a first-year (freshman, I believe you call it in the US? I am in NZ), and pharmcol. is unavailable first year.
But it struck me that a few of you here would probably be able to help remedy this lack of knowledge instead, so I don't have to wait.
Can you guys give definitions of Ki and associated values, and how one goes about obtaining said values =) ? I'd assume it's to do with noting perhaps it displacing a radioligand at the binding site at a certain concentration of a certain proportion of receptor, or something similar to that, but I don't see how you'd actually test for that?
Info greatly appreciated =) !
Maybe it will helps some others here gain a better understanding of all this too.
(Oh yeah, and a sort-of relevant question - i've been looking at a paper on some nice new exotic monoamine reuptake inhibitors lately, and I noticed that a few of them had Ki-uptake values for the DAT that were lower than their Ki-affinity values - do I take this to mean they achieve inhibition of DAT more often than they actually manage to bind? I can't get me head around it. And if my deduction is correct, doesn't this mean they'd be /fantastically/ recreational =) ? )
I can't ask a tutor or whatnot as i'm just a 18yo student and so are still only a first-year (freshman, I believe you call it in the US? I am in NZ), and pharmcol. is unavailable first year.
But it struck me that a few of you here would probably be able to help remedy this lack of knowledge instead, so I don't have to wait.
Can you guys give definitions of Ki and associated values, and how one goes about obtaining said values =) ? I'd assume it's to do with noting perhaps it displacing a radioligand at the binding site at a certain concentration of a certain proportion of receptor, or something similar to that, but I don't see how you'd actually test for that?
Info greatly appreciated =) !
Maybe it will helps some others here gain a better understanding of all this too.
(Oh yeah, and a sort-of relevant question - i've been looking at a paper on some nice new exotic monoamine reuptake inhibitors lately, and I noticed that a few of them had Ki-uptake values for the DAT that were lower than their Ki-affinity values - do I take this to mean they achieve inhibition of DAT more often than they actually manage to bind? I can't get me head around it. And if my deduction is correct, doesn't this mean they'd be /fantastically/ recreational =) ? )
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