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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 2
2013 pubmed 31 citations

Doping control analysis of seven bioactive peptides in horse plasma by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry.

Kwok. Wai Him WH; Ho. Emmie N M EN; Lau. Ming Yip MY; Leung. Gary N W GN; Wong. April S Y AS; Wan. Terence S M TS

Key Findings

  • A mixed‑mode anion exchange cartridge can extract seven bioactive peptides and their metabolites from plasma without needing expensive antibodies.
  • Ultra‑high‑performance LC‑HRMS detects each peptide at concentrations below 50 pg/mL, meeting doping‑control standards.
  • The method successfully identified TB‑500 and its metabolite in horses after a 10 mg subcutaneous dose, and it can be adapted for other peptides.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this shows that even low‑dose GHRP‑2 use can be detected with sensitive lab tests, so caution is needed if doping tests are a concern. The low detection limit also suggests that any claimed “undetectable” dosing strategies are unlikely to succeed with modern equipment.

Summary

Scientists created a cheap lab method that can spot tiny amounts of popular research peptides, like GHRP‑2, in horse blood. It can detect less than 50 pg per milliliter, and they even showed it works after giving a horse a dose of TB‑500. The technique could be expanded to catch other peptides too.

Abstract

In recent years, there has been an ongoing focus for both human and equine doping control laboratories on developing detection methods to control the misuse of peptide therapeutics. Immunoaffinity purification is a common extraction method to isolate peptides from biological matrices and obtain sufficient detectability in subsequent instrumental analysis. However, monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies for immunoaffinity purification may not be commercially available, and even if available, such antibodies are usually very costly. In our study, a simple mixed-mode anion exchange solid-phase extraction cartridge was employed for the extraction of seven target peptides (GHRP-1, GHRP-2, GHRP-6, ipamorelin, hexarelin, CJC-1295, and N-acetylated LKKTETQ (active ingredient of TB-500)) and their in vitro metabolites from horse plasma. The final extract was subject to ultra-high-performance liquid chromatographic separation and analysed with a hybrid high-resolution mass spectrometer. The limits of detection for all seven peptides were estimated to be less than 50 pg/mL. Method validation was performed with respect to specificity, precision, and recovery. The applicability of this multi-analyte method was demonstrated by the detection of N-acetylated LKKTETQ and its metabolite N-acetylated LK from plasma samples obtained after subcutaneous administration of TB-500 (10 mg N-acetylated LKKTETQ) to two thoroughbred geldings. This method could easily be modified to cover more bioactive peptides, such as dermorphin, β-casomorphin, and desmopressin. With the use of high-resolution mass spectrometry, the full-scan data acquired can also be re-processed retrospectively to search for peptides and their metabolites that have not been targeted at the time of analysis. To our knowledge, this is the first identification of in vitro metabolites of all the studied peptides other than TB-500 in horses.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2013

Date

2013-01-15T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s00216-012-6697-9

Citations

31

References

26