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Pharmacology of Nicotine

Date post: 08-Jan-2018
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What is nicotine? plant alkaloid derived from nicotinic acid Nicotine is an alkaloid. Alkaloids are a group of compounds that are typically produced by plants to discourage animals from eating them. Nicotine commonly comes from the tobacco plant There are 66 other plants from which nicotine can be obtained. These plants are apart of the nightshade family (include eggplant, tomato, potato, green pepper) Free-base nicotine is used as an insecticide since it is highly poisonous and reactive with oxygen and other chemicals, destroying cells and tissues. 1) Nicotinic acid+SOCl2, heat  C6H4ONCl (nicotinoyl chloride)  2) Nicotinoyl Chloride +C2H5OCH2CH2CH2CdCl  C11H15O2N  3) C11H15O2N+NH3, H2, catalyst  C11H18ON2 4) C11H18ON2+HBr+strong heat  C9H12N2+ethyl bromide  5) C9H12N2+CH3I, NaOH  C10H14N2 ((+)-nicotine) 6) ( + )-nicotine + (+)tartaric acid  2C14H20O6N2 7) C14H20O6N2+NaOH  (-)-nicotine+sodium tartrate http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/cgi-bin/pfaf/arr_html?Nicotiana+tabacum
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Pharmacology of Nicotine Colleen Miller Lesley-Ann Giddings
Transcript
Page 1: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Pharmacology of Nicotine

Colleen Miller

Lesley-Ann Giddings

Page 2: Pharmacology of Nicotine

What is nicotine?

• plant alkaloid

• derived from nicotinic acid

http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/cgi-bin/pfaf/arr_html?Nicotiana+tabacum

Page 3: Pharmacology of Nicotine

How does nicotine act on receptors?

• nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

• mimics acetylcholine (agonist)

• opens ion channel– depolarizes

Page 4: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Nicotine and Acetylcholine

http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6807/2/1

Page 5: Pharmacology of Nicotine

• Releases ACh, NE, DA, S, glutamate, and GABA

Page 6: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Effects of NicotinePositive:

Anxiolysis

Cognitive Enhancement

Cerebro-vasodilation

Neuroprotection

Analgesia

Anti-psychotic

Negative:

Gastrointestinal Distress

Hypothermia

Emesis

Hypertension

Seizures

Respiratory Distress

Page 7: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Nicotine Administration• Inhalation

– Cigarettes (~1.0 mg)– Inhaler

• Nasal– Nasal spray

• Oral– Gum – Lozenges – Tablets

• Transdermal– Patch

Page 8: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Chemistry of Nicotine• basic compound

• water soluble

• lipophilic

• environments:– no absorption in acidic

environments– functions at blood pH = 7.4

(31%)– absorption occurs readily in

basic environments

Page 9: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Pharmacokinetics• Inhalation of nicotine is the most addictive

Page 10: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Addiction via smoking• cigarettes have additives that cause

addiction

• sensory cues (heat, sight, and smell)

• smokers have greater number of nicotinic receptors

• inhalation from cigarettes causes nicotine to cross blood brain barrier more rapidly

Page 11: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Nicotine absorption from cigarettes• Readily absorbed through

oral and nasal mucous membrane

• basic pipe or cigar smoke leads to rapid increases in nicotine without inhalation

• flue-cured cigarettes are acidic– little buccal absorption– need to absorb nicotine

through inhalation

Page 12: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Absorption through Inhalation• absorption through the surface of alveolar capillary

interface

• absorption into the pulmonary capillary blood flow

• circulates throughout entire blood volume

http://sln.fi.edu/biosci/systems/pulmonary.html

Page 13: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Buccal Absorption• Absorbed in small

intestine• Carried to blood• Undergoes pre-

systemic metabolism by liver

• 30-40% bioavailability

Page 14: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Elimination• First order

• Half-life averages 2 hours

• Metabolized in liver, lung and kidney

Page 15: Pharmacology of Nicotine

How is nicotine eliminated?• P-450 and aldehyde oxidase enzymes in liver

N

NCH3

N

NCH3

O

70%

4%

17%N

NH

17%out (renal excretion)

nicotine - N'-oxide

and nicotine isomethonium ion

cotinine - N'-oxide

trans-3'hydrocotinine

nicotine

cotinine

nornicotine

Page 16: Pharmacology of Nicotine

Therapeutic Opportunities• Cognitive Dysfunction/ Attention Disorders

• Neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimers, Parkinsons)

• Pain

• Schizophrenia

• Depression

Page 17: Pharmacology of Nicotine

• Epilepsy

• Tourette’s Syndrome

• ADHD

• Anxiety

• Vestibular Function

• Gastric Disorders

Page 18: Pharmacology of Nicotine

And the take home message is…• The pharmacokinetics are

important for determining addictive potential of nicotine

• Inhalation of nicotine is the most addictive form of uptake

• There are many therapeutic opportunities to be developed


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