Metabolites identification of anabolic steroid bolasterone in vitro and in rats by high resolution liquid chromatography mass spectrometry

Authors
Muresan, Anca RalucaRahaman, Khandoker AsiqurSon, JunghyunKang, Min-JungKwon, Oh-Seung
Issue Date
2023-11
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Citation
Drug Testing and Analysis, v.15, no.11-12, pp.1329 - 1343
Abstract
Bolasterone (7 alpha,17 alpha-dimethyltestosterone) and anabolic androgenic steroids are included in the World Anti-Doping Agency's Prohibited list of substances. This study aimed to evaluate the metabolism of bolasterone through in vitro experiments using rat liver microsomes and in vivo experiments using rat urine after oral administration. Urine samples were collected over a 168-h period. Bolasterone and its metabolites were detected by liquid chromatography coupled with a Q-Exactive Obitrap mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS). Ultimately 16 hydroxylated metabolites (M1-M16), one metabolite from the reduction of the 3-keto function and 4-ene (M17), and one glucuronic acid conjugated metabolite (M18) were detected. Metabolites M17 and M18 were confirmed by comparison with available reference or authentic standards. Metabolic modifications in the structure of the parent bolasterone result in different fragmentation patterns. Based on the sensitivity of the HRMS data, characteristic ions such as m/z 121.064 (C8H9O) generated from ring A of the mono-hydroxylated metabolites and 121.101 (C9H13) generated from ring D of the di-hydroxylated metabolites were observed that helped differentiate between the obtained metabolites. The structures of fragment ions were tentatively proposed based on their fragmentation pathways, where the significant ions were correlated to the possible structural fragments. In conclusion, new metabolites of bolasterone were detected and characterized by the use of the full-scan and dd-MS/MS using LC-HRMS, and this data can be useful for providing metabolite information for the interpretation of mass spectra of anabolic bolasterone analogues for doping screening tests.
Keywords
COLLISION-INDUCED DISSOCIATION; bolasterone; high resolution mass spectrometry; in vitro; metabolism; rats
ISSN
1942-7603
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/113164
DOI
10.1002/dta.3447
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2023
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