Abstract

ObjectiveClinical research on gene therapy has advanced the field of veterinary medicine, and gene doping, which is the illegal use of gene therapy, has become a major concern in horseracing. Since the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities defined the administration of oligonucleotides and its analogues as a genetic therapy in 2017, the development of therapeutic nucleotide-detection techniques has become an urgent need. Most currently marketed and developed oligonucleotide therapeutics for humans consist of modified nucleotides to increase stability, and phosphorothioate (PS) modification is common.ResultsWe demonstrated the specific detection of phosphorothioated oligonucleotides (PSOs) using LC/MS/MS. PSOs produce the specific product ion (m/z 94.9362) derived from PS moiety. PS is not derived from endogenous substances in animal body, and the product ion is a suitable marker for the detection of PSOs. With our strategy, reproducible target analyses were achieved for identifying the specific substances, with a LOD of 0.1 ng/mL and a quantification rage of 0.1–200 ng/mL in deproteinated plasma. Non-target analyses could also detect the presence of PSOs selectively with 100 ng/mL in the same matrix. These results suggested that the detection of PSOs in horse blood is possible by targeting the product ion using LC/MS/MS.

Highlights

  • Horseracing originated in the early 18th century in Britain with the production of Thoroughbreds by breeding Arabian stallions with British native mares, and it spread to the rest of the world as a sport [1]

  • We demonstrated the specific detection of phosphorothioated oligonucleotides (PSOs) using LC/mass spectrometer (MS)/MS

  • PS is not derived from endogenous substances in animal body, and the product ion is a suitable marker for the detection of PSOs

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Summary

Objective

Clinical research on gene therapy has advanced the field of veterinary medicine, and gene doping, which is the illegal use of gene therapy, has become a major concern in horseracing. Since the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities defined the administration of oligonucleotides and its analogues as a genetic therapy in 2017, the development of therapeutic nucleotide-detection techniques has become an urgent need. Most currently marketed and developed oligonucleotide therapeutics for humans consist of modified nucleotides to increase stabil‐ ity, and phosphorothioate (PS) modification is common

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