In force

Detection of genetic polymorphisms of the human Erythropietin gene in urine, whole blood and dried blood spots

Principal investigator
F. Donati
Country
Italy
Institution
Laboratorio Antidoping FMSI
Year approved
2023
Status
Live
Themes
EPO-ESA

Project description

Code: 23E05FD

Several polymorphisms/variants of the human EPO gene could be the cause of confounding effects in the application of the analytical methods that are routinely applied for the detection of the abuse of recombinant erythropoietin (recEPO). The most known of them is the c.577del (rs369859204) variant, a single nucleotide deletion in the position 577 of the human EPO gene exon 5. The deletion causes a shifting of the sequence within the terminal exon 5 with consequent loss of the stop codon. At translational level, this results in the formation of a longer mature protein with a higher molecular weight of 3.3 kDa. In doping control, this results in the visualization of a “double band” during the application of the routinary SAR-Page method for the detection of the abuse of recEPO. The double band may be then erroneously interpreted as a false positive sample. As stated in the WADA technical document TDEPO2022, it is suggested to screen for the presence of the c.577del variant whenever a suspected double band is detected by the SAR-Page analysis, in the final aim to avoid the possibility of a false positive finding. Moreover, at least 12 other polymorphisms/variants have been described in the literature that are potentially capable of generating confounding effects in the interpretations of the antidoping analyzes. By following the input given by WADA TDEPO2022, this project involves the development and validation of a genetic test, based on the genomic DNA Sanger sequencing method, that is capable to identify the c.577del variant and all the other polymorphisms/variants present on the human EPO gene (namely: rs1554393458, rs1554393463, rs1419397684, rs773895305, rs763035217, rs1562901775, rs71517124, rs1562902091, rs893404064, rs752755372, rs951322017, rs369859204), and the study of their incidence in determining confounding effects in the interpretation of the routinary tests performed for the purpose of detecting the abuse of recombinant EPO by athletes.