There are three different types of antagonists.
Competitive While only a few α-adrenergic antagonists are competitive, all β-adrenergic antagonists are
competitive antagonists. Competitive antagonists are a type of reversible antagonists. A competitive antagonist will attach itself to the same
binding site of the receptor that the agonist will bind to. Even though it is in activator region, the antagonist will not activate the receptor. This type of binding is reversible as increasing the concentration of agonist will outcompete the concentration of antagonist, resulting in receptor activation. Adrenergic competitive antagonists are shorter lasting than the other two types of antagonists. While the antagonists for alpha and beta receptors are usually different compounds, there has been recent
drug development that effects both types of the adrenoreceptors.
Examples Two examples of competitive adrenergic antagonists are
propranolol and
phentolamine. Phentolamine is a competitive and nonselective α-adrenoreceptor antagonist. Propranolol is a β-adrenoreceptor antagonist.
Non-competitive While competitive antagonists bind to the agonist or ligand binding site of the receptor reversibly,
non-competitive antagonists can either bind to the ligand site or other site called the
allosteric site. A receptor's agonist does not bind to its allosteric binding site. The binding of a non-competitive antagonist is irreversible. If the non-competitive antagonist binds to the allosteric site and an agonist binds to the ligand site, the receptor will remain unactivated. An example of an adrenergic non competitive antagonists is phenoxybenzamine. This drug is a non-selective α-adrenergic antagonist, which means it binds to both alpha receptors.
Uncompetitive There were few if any adrenergic
uncompetitive antagonists. An uncompetitive antagonist is slightly different from the other two types of antagonists. The action of an uncompetitive antagonist is dependent on the receptor's prior activation. This means only after the agonist binds to the receptor can the antagonist block the receptor's function. == Examples ==