In force

Investigation of in vitro/ex vivo TB-500 metabolism, synthesis of relevant metabolites and detection limits in urine and plasma

Principal investigator
P. Van Eenoo
Country
Belgium
Institution
Ghent University
Year approved
2013
Status
Completed
Themes
Other Growth Factors

Project description

Code: 13D34PV 

In the recent years, the use of performance-enhancing peptides has become a growing issue in human as well as in equine sports drug testing. A product called TB-500, claimed to increase muscle growth and tissue repair in horses and other mammals, is available on the Internet and officially distributed.  Anecdotal use not only in horse racing, but also in human sport has been documented, reaching also worldwide attention from the media. The active content has been identified as the N-terminal acetylated 17-23 fragment of thymosin beta4 (Ac-LKKTETQ) by our group.  
Detection of the intact TB-500 and several metabolites has been achieved in horse urine and plasma, but no data are available for detectability in human. It has already been demonstrated that in vitro/ex vivo studies can be used to obtain reliable indication on the metabolism of small peptides.   
The aims of the project are therefore to 1) characterize human metabolism of TB-500 by using human liver microsomes and human S9 fraction (for in vitro studies) and human plasma/serum (ex vivo studies); 2) synthesize appropriate amounts of certified reference standards of TB-500 and its most representative metabolites by solid-phase synthesis; 3) determination of the detection limits of the relevant metabolites and implementation of the metabolites into peptide-screening methods. The synthesized reference standards will be distributed to other human doping control laboratories.

Main Findings: 

A product called TB-500, claimed to increase muscle growth and tissue repair in horses and other mammals, is available on the internet and officially distributed. It is presented as “the synthetic peptide of the active region of thymosin-beta 4 (Tβ4)”, without any further qualitative description such as amino acid sequence or molecular weight.  
In this project the first goal was to characterize human metabolism of TB-500 by using human liver microsomes and human S9 fraction (for in vitro studies) and human plasma/serum (ex vivo studies). Results of this study show that TB-500 showed serial cleavage at the C-terminus, whereas acetylation of the leucine seemed to provide efficient protection of the N-terminus. Results were similar to those described by Ho et al. in the horse using horse liver homogenate as in vitro model. 
 In a second phase of the project, appropriate amounts of 3 metabolites TB-500 M(1-2), TB-500 M(1-3) and TB-500 M(1-5) observed in the first part of the project were synthesized using typical Fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl (FMoC)-synthesis strategy. As proposed, the synthesized reference standards were distributed to other human doping control laboratories. Besides the synthesis of the metabolites, a heavy version of the TB-500 (TB-500-d3) was synthesized for use as internal standard. In a final step of the project, the LODs of the synthesized metabolites were determined and implemented into an in-house screening method for the detection of peptides in urine. LODs were 500 pg/mL for TB-500 M(1-2), 100 pg/mL for TB-500 M(1-3) and 50 pg/mL for TB-500 M(1-5).