» Articles » PMID: 28864198

Comprehensive Solid-phase Extraction of Multitudinous Bioactive Peptides from Equine Plasma and Urine for Doping Detection

Overview
Journal Anal Chim Acta
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2017 Sep 3
PMID 28864198
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The ability to analyze biological samples for multitudinous exogenous peptides with a single analytical method is desired for doping control in horse racing. The key to achieving this goal is the capability of extracting all target peptides from the sample matrix. In the present study, theory of mixed-mode solid-phase extraction (SPE) of peptides from plasma is described, and a generic mixed-mode SPE procedure has been developed for recovering multitudinous exogenous peptides with remarkable sequence diversity, from equine plasma and urine in a single procedure. Both the theory and the developed SPE procedure have led to the development of a novel analytical method for comprehensive detection of multitudinous bioactive peptides in equine plasma and urine using liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS). Thirty nine bioactive peptides were extracted with strong anion-exchange mixed-mode SPE sorbent, separated on a reversed-phase C column and detected by HRMS and data-dependent tandem mass spectrometry. The limit of detection (LOD) was 10-50 pg mL in plasma for most of the peptides and 100 pg mL for the remaining. For urine, LOD was 20-400 pg mL for most of the peptides and 1-4 ng mL for the others. In vitro degradation of the peptides in equine plasma and urine was examined at ambient temperature; the peptides except those with a D-amino acid at position 2 were unstable not only in plasma but also in urine. The developed method was successful in analysis of plasma and urine samples from horses administered dermorphin. Additionally, dermorphin metabolites were identified in the absence of reference standards. The developed SPE procedure and LC-HRMS method can theoretically detect virtually all peptides present at a sufficient concentration in a sample. New peptides can be readily included in the method to be detected without method re-development. The developed method also generates such data that can be retrospectively analyzed for peptides unknown at the time of sample analysis. It is the first generic analytical method for comprehensive detection of multitudinous exogenous peptides in biological samples, to the authors' knowledge.

Citing Articles

Bioanalytical methods in doping controls: a review.

Thomas A, Walpurgis K, Naumann N, Piper T, Thevis M Bioanalysis. 2025; 17(5):359-370.

PMID: 39916648 PMC: 11875490. DOI: 10.1080/17576180.2025.2460951.


Synthetic Peptides in Doping Control: A Powerful Tool for an Analytical Challenge.

Gomez-Guerrero N, Gonzalez-Lopez N, Zapata-Velasquez J, Martinez-Ramirez J, Rivera-Monroy Z, Garcia-Castaneda J ACS Omega. 2022; 7(43):38193-38206.

PMID: 36340120 PMC: 9631397. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c05296.


Magnetic solid-phase extraction of high molecular weight peptides using stearic acid-functionalized magnetic hydroxyapatite nanocomposite: determination of some hypothalamic agents in biological samples.

Salehpour N, Bayatloo M, Nojavan S Anal Bioanal Chem. 2021; 413(30):7609-7623.

PMID: 34668043 DOI: 10.1007/s00216-021-03725-6.


Identification of metabolomic changes in horse plasma after racing by liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry as a strategy for doping testing.

Ueda T, Tozaki T, Nozawa S, Kinoshita K, Gawahara H J Equine Sci. 2019; 30(3):55-61.

PMID: 31592223 PMC: 6773618. DOI: 10.1294/jes.30.55.