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Four Hapten Spacer Sites Modulating Class Specificity: Nondirectional Multianalyte Immunoassay for 31 #-agonists and Analogues Lanteng Wang, Wen Meng Jiang, Xing Shen, Xiangmei Li, Xinan Huang, Zhenlin Xu, Yuanming Sun, Shun-Wan Chan, Lingwen Zeng, Sergei Alexandrovich Eremin, and Hongtao Lei Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b04684 • Publication Date (Web): 21 Jan 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 21, 2018
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Analytical Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
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Analytical Chemistry
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Four Hapten Spacer Sites Modulating Class Specificity:
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Non-directional Multianalyte Immunoassay for 31 β-agonists and
3
Analogues
4
Lanteng Wanga #, Wenmeng Jianga #, Xing Shena, Xiangmei Lia, Xin-an Huangb,
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Zhenlin Xua, Yuanming Suna, Shun-Wan Chanc, Lingwen Zengd, Sergei
6
Alexandrovich Eremine, f, Hongtao Leia*
7 8
a
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Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China
Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Food Quality and Safety, South China
10
b
11
Innovation Center, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine,
12
Guangzhou 510405, China
13
c
14
Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
15
d
16
Institutes of Biomedicine and Health, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou
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510530, China
18
e
19
Russia
20
f
21
Russian Academy of Sciences, 119071 Moscow, Russia
22
* Corresponding author. Phone: +8620 8528 3925. Fax: +8620 8528 0270. E-mail:
Tropical Medicine Institute & South China Chinese Medicine Collaborative
Faculty of Science & Technology, Technology & Higher Education Institute of
South China Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Guangzhou
Faculty of Chemistry, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow,
A.N. Bach Institute of Biochemistry, Research Center of Biotechnology of the
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[email protected]. #
Wang L. and Jiang W. contributed equally to this work.
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Analytical Chemistry
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Abstract: Immunoassay methods are important to monitor β-agonists illegally used
26
for reducing animal fat deposition in livestock. However, there is no a simultaneous
27
screening surveillance immunoassay for possibly occurred various β-agonist
28
chemicals in food. In this study, using an R-(–)-salbutamol derivative as the
29
immunizing hapten, an antibody recognizing 31 β-agonists and analogues was
30
generated for the first time. Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity
31
relationship (3D QSAR) revealed that strong steric and hydrophobic fields around the
32
hapten spacer near C-2, as well as a chirality at C-1´, dominantly modulated the class
33
specificity of the raised antibody. However, a hapten spacer linked at C-2´ or C-1
34
would lead to a narrow specificity, and the spacer charge at C-6 could affect the raised
35
antibody specificity spectrum. A class specificity competitive indirect enzyme linked
36
immunosorbent assay (ciELISA) was established with an ideal recovery ranged from
37
81.8% to 118.3% based on the obtained antibody. With a good agreement to
38
HPLC-MS method, the proposed ciELISA was confirmed to be reliable for the rapid
39
surveillance screening assay of β-agonists in urine sample. This investigation will
40
contribute to the rational design and control of the immunoassay specificity.
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β-agonists are a class of therapeutic drugs commonly used in the treatments for
42
acute symptoms of asthma owing to their bronchodilator activities, e.g. salbutamol,
43
clenbuterol, terbutaline and salmeterol etc.1 An overdose of β-agonists could lead to
44
symptom of nausea, dizziness and palpitation, even cause to death.2 However, some
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of these compounds were sometimes found to be illegally used as broncho-dilating
46
agents, because they can reduce carcass fat content and then result in a muscle
47
hypertrophy.3
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well-known as “lean meat agents” in China, these agents ever resulted in serious
49
public health accidents.4 In 2009 and 2011, a number of β-agonists poisoning
50
incidents occurred in China, and these incidents caused sickness to 70 people in
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Guangzhou and 91 people in Changsha, respectively.5 In European Union (EU) and
52
China, the illegal use of β-agonists as a growth promotor in animal husbandry is
53
forbidden.6
Salbutamol,
clenbuterol,
brombuterol
and
ractopamine
were
54
Antibody-based immunoassays are effective tools for either quantitative or
55
qualitative detection of chemical residues in foods and environment, which do not
56
require complicated equipment, and are capable of analyzing a quantity of samples
57
simultaneously.
58
immunosorbent
59
immunochromatographic test and so on, had focused on the detection of single
60
β-agonist7-8 or a limited numbers of β-agonists.9-11 However, a numerous of β-agonist
61
have been be found to ever or possibly abused in animal products.12 It would be
62
urgent to develop an immunoassay for the simultaneous detection of a series of
Most
of
immunoassay
methods,
assay
(ELISA),
DNA
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such
as
Enzyme-linked
labeled-immunoprobe,
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Analytical Chemistry
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β-agonists and analogues instead of one assay for each specific target. However, there
64
is not yet a multianalyte immunoassay for a non-directional screening purpose to
65
variously enough β-agonists and possibly occurred analogues in animal food. This is
66
at least ascribed to the lack of a class specificity antibody and understanding the class
67
recognition structure-activity relationship, and thus leading to the difficult artificial
68
control of the resultant antibody specificity.13
69
Salbutamol possesses two enantiomers, R-(–)-salbutamol and S-(+)-salbutamol.
70
R-(–)-isomer is approximately 80 times more potent than S-(+)-isomer on the
71
therapeutically bronchodilating effects, and pure R-(–)-salbutamol can reduced side
72
effects.14-15 In our previous study, the raised antibody against Rac-salbutamol
73
demonstrated an unexpected cross-reactivity (CR, 447.3% and 255.8%) to
74
brombuterol and clenbuterol.16 This suggested that salbutamol would possibly be a
75
hapten candidate to produce class specificity antibody to β-agonists.
76
In this study, to develop a class specific immunoassay and better investigate the
77
recognition between the antibody and β-agonists, the pure isomer R-(–)-salbutamol
78
instead of Rac-salbutamol was selected as immunizing hapten to raise the antibody. It
79
was interestingly found that 31 β-agonists and analogues could be well recognized by
80
this resultant antibody. Based on the cross-reactivity and the structure analysis, a
81
comparative molecular field analysis (CoMFA) and a comparative molecular
82
similarity indices analysis (CoMSIA) were then used for the investigation of
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three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationship (3D QSAR) of the
84
antibody and β-agonists. The effect of hapten spacer sites on the class specificity were
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reasonably elaborated and predicted.
86 87
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Reagents and Animals. Rac-salbutamol, R-(–)-salbutamol and S-(+)-salbutamol
89
were obtained from Yunhui Trade Co., Ltd., (Guangzhou, China). 3-dehydroxy
90
salbutamol (3D-SAL), pirbuterol, zilpaterol, octopamine, colterol, bitolterol,
91
indacaterol, olodaterol, fenspiride, reproterol, t-butylnorsynephrine, bromoclenbuterol,
92
benzaldehyde,5-[2-[(1,1-dimethylethyl)amino]-1-hydroxyethyl]-2-hydroxy
93
salbutamol methyl ether, salbutamon, hydroxymethyl clenbuterol (HYD), clenhexerol,
94
5-hydroxy salbutamol, 1-(3,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-2-(isopropylamino)ethanol (DIM),
95
cimbuterol and procaterol were purchased from TRC (Toronto, Canada). Salmeterol,
96
vilanterol, mabuterol, mapenterol, carbuterol, ritodrine, orciprenaline, clenbuterol,
97
clenpenterol, clenproperol and bambuterol were purchased from Dr. Ehrenstorfer
98
(Augsburg, Germany). Penbutolol, brombuterol, terbutaline, tulobuterol, ractopamine,
99
clorprenaline,
hexoprenaline
(DAH),
and
100
benzenemethanol,4-amino-α-[[(1,1-dimethylethyl)amino]methyl]
101
purchase from Witega (Berlin, Germany). Alprenolol, pindolol, cimaterol,
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arformoterol, propafenone and propranolol were purchased from Aladdin (Shanghai,
103
China). Epinephrine, norepinephrine and isoproterenol were purchased from Kewei
104
Co., Ltd., (Shanghai, China). R-(–)-2-tert-butylamino-1-phenylethanol (R-(–)-TER),
105
S-(+)-2-tert-butylamino-1-phenylethanol
106
(DMF), isobutyl chloroformate, bovine serum albumin (BSA), ovalbumin (OVA) and
(S-(+)-TER),
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(BEN)
were
N,N-dimethylformamide
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Analytical Chemistry
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complete and incomplete Freund’s adjuvants were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis,
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MO, USA). Phosphate-buffered saline with 0.1% Tween-20 (PBST, 0.01 mol L-1, pH
109
7.4) was for the use of the working buffer for aqueous standard solutions of analytes.
110
All other chemicals and organic solvents that were analytical grade or better were
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obtained from a local chemical supplier (Yunhui Trade Co., Ltd., Guangzhou, China).
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New Zealand white rabbits with 2-3 months old (about 2 kg) were purchased from
113
Guangdong Experimental Animal Center.
114
Apparatus. Ultraviolet−visible (UV−vis) spectrum was recorded on UV-4000
115
spectrophotometer (Hitachi, Japan). Electronic circular dichroism (ECD) spectrum
116
was obtained on Chirascan circular dichroism spectrometer (Applied Photophysics,
117
UK). The purified antibody concentration was determined by NanoDrop 2000c
118
spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, USA). ELISA plates were washed in a MK2
119
microplate washer (Thermo Scientific, USA). ELISA absorbance was measured at a
120
wavelength of 450 nm with Multiskan MK3 microplate reader (Thermo Scientific,
121
USA). Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum was obtained from DRX-400
122
NMR spectrometer (Bruker, Germany). The chromatography was manipulated on the
123
HPLC-MS system (LC-30-API5500, Shimadzu, Japan), and an Inertsil® ODS-SP
124
HPLC column (C18, 4.6×150 mm, 5 µm, GL science, Japan) was used.
125
Hapten Synthesis. Succinic anhydride (77 mg, 0.77 mmol) was added to a
126
stirred mixture of R-(–)-salbutamol (220 mg, 0.77 mmol) in dry ethanol (40 mL)
127
under nitrogen at room temperature. The solution was stirred at room temperature for
128
12 hours, and filtered to obtain the hapten R-(–)-salbutamol (R-(–)-sal-hapten, 39 mg,
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11.5%). 1H-NMR (DMSO, 400 MHz): δ (ppm) 1.12 (9H, s), 2.38-2.41 (2H, m),
130
2.53-2.56 (2H, m), 2.76-2.78 (2H, m), 4.61-4.62 (1H, m), 5.05 (2H, d, J = 2.0 Hz ),
131
6.77 (1H, d, J = 8.0 Hz ), 7.10 (1H, dd, J = 8.4, 2.0 Hz), 7.27 (1H, d, J = 2.0 Hz ). MS
132
m/z (+ESI): 340.1 [M+H]+.
133
Antibody Production. The hapten-protein conjugates preparation and antibody
134
production methods were described in Supporting Information. The antibody from
135
rabbits were purified with caprylic acid-saturated ammonium sulfate precipitation,
136
and the purity was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
137
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).17
138
ciELISA Procedure. The competitive indirect enzyme linked immunosorbent
139
assay (ciELISA) for β-agonists was conducted according to the previously reported
140
procedure.18 The ciELISA calibration curves were fitted with a four-parameter logistic
141
function.19 IC50 is the concentration of the analyte that resulted in 50% inhibition. The
142
limit of detection (LOD) was defined as the concentration of analyte inhibited 10%
143
binding (IC10).20 The linear range was defined as the lower and upper concentration
144
that provided 20% ~ 80% inhibition.21 The antibody specificity was measured with
145
the cross-reactivity (CR) of the structurally related β-agonists (Figure 1).22
146
Molecular Modeling. The molecular modeling was conducted by SYBYL-X
147
2.1.1 program package.23 Tripos force field and Gasteiger-Huckel charges were used
148
in the energy minimization. Calculated oil/water partition coefficient (ClogP) values
149
were computed by CLOGP program. The detailed methods were described in
150
Supporting Information.
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Analytical Chemistry
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Sample analysis. In order to evaluate the accuracy and precision of the
152
immunoassay, the negative swine urine samples gifted by Dr. Yu Wang from
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Guangzhou Institute for Food Control, China, were spiked with salbutamol,
154
clenbuterol, brombuterol and cimbuterol at three concentrations (1, 5 and 10 ng mL-1),
155
respectively, and then centrifuged at 27 000 g for 15 min, the supernatants were
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collected as spiked samples for the ciELISA analysis.
157
The methods confirmation experiments were carried out by comparing ciELISA
158
with HPLC-MS. The HPLC-MS analysis of spiked urine samples was conducted
159
following the procedure of China National Standard (GB/T 22286-2008).
160 161
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
162
Absolute configuration of hapten. The experimental ECD spectrum of the
163
R-(–)-hapten in acetonitrile was showed in Figure S1. The energy, oscillation and
164
rotational strength of R-(–)-isomer structure were calculated using time-dependent
165
density functional theory (TD-DFT) by Gaussian 16.24 And the calculated ECD
166
spectrum
167
B3LYP/6-311+G(2d,p) optimized geometries. It was found that the experimental
168
spectrum was similar to the calculated spectrum, and both spectra exhibited strong
169
positive Cotton effects near 203 nm and negative Cotton effects near 192 nm (Figure
170
S1). Therefore, the hapten absolute configuration could be confirmed as
171
R-(–)-isomer.25
172
was
computed
at
the
B3LYP/6-311+G(2d,p)
level
using
the
Immunoreagent preparation. UV−vis spectra of hapten-protein conjugate,
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carrier protein (BSA, OVA) and the R-(–)-sal-hapten (Figure S2) implied that the
174
coupling of hapten and carrier protein was successful.26 The SDS-PAGE (Figure S3)
175
showed that the purified R-(–)-salbutamol antibody exhibited a heavy chain at about
176
50 kDa, and a light chain at about 25 kDa. This indicated that the antibody purity was
177
ideal for the further investigation.27 The purified antibody concentration determined
178
using A280 absorbance measurement was 3.8 mg mL-1.28
179
ciELISA. Optimal concentrations of coating antigen and antibody were critical
180
to the sensitivity of ciELISA.29-30 It was found that the combination of the coating
181
antigen at 12.5 ng mL-1 together with the antibody at 0.1 µg mL-1 (1/32000 dilution)
182
exhibited a maximum absorbance around 1.0 and an optimal sensitivity.31 The
183
established ciELISA calibration curve for R-(–)-salbutamol exhibited IC50 of 0.5 ng
184
mL-1, the concentration range from 0.1 to 40.9 ng mL-1 and the LOD of 0.04 ng mL-1
185
(Figure 2).
186
Specificity. In the United States, only ractopamine and zilpaterol were approved
187
as feed additives for cattle and swine by FDA, and other compounds are banned in
188
animal products.32 However, all β-agonists have been banned for animal products in
189
European Union (EU) and China. Ractopamine, clenbuterol, salbutamol, zilpaterol,
190
cimaterol, terbutaline and tulobuterol were officially banned, and most often found
191
being illegally used in China.5, 32 For purpose of investigating the impact of hapten
192
structure on the antibody specificity, 54 compounds were used for the evaluation of
193
cross-reactivity. These compounds included the most commonly β-agonists and their
194
analogues, e.g. clenbuterol, ractopamine, zilpaterol, clenhexerol and 3-dehydroxy
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Analytical Chemistry
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salbutamol. Moreover, some potentially abused compounds in animal products, e.g.
196
brombuterol, bambuterol, penbuterol, clorprenaline, mabuterol and cimaterol, were
197
also included in the 54 compounds.33-34 The cross-reactivity to R-(–)-salbutamol was
198
set as the reference cross-reactivity (100%), it was found that there were 31
199
compounds could be recognized by the antibody against R-(–)-salbutamol (Table 1).
200
Comparing the salbutamol hapten structures reported previously,4, 30, 35-36 it could
201
be found that there were other four salbutamol derivatives with different spacer for the
202
antibody generation, herein named sal-hapten-1,30 sal-hapten-2,4 sal-hapten-3,35
203
sal-hapten-436 (Figure 1 & Table 1). Both sal-hapten-1 and sal-hapten-2 had a spacer
204
at a same site (C-6), and their spacer difference was one benzene ring on sal-hapten-2
205
spacer. However, the antibody against sal-hapten-1 exhibited a poorer recognition to
206
terbutaline and clenbuterol (CR < 0.1%), but the antibody against sal-hapten-2
207
showed a better recognition (CR, 10% and 107%), it could be inferred that the
208
supplement benzene ring at C-6 spacer on sal-hapten-2 contributed to the better
209
antibody binding affinity. But both resultant antibodies were still a narrow specific
210
(not class specificity) due to the limited recognition numbers.
211
Different from the same spacer sites of sal-hapten-1 and sal-hapten-2, the spacer
212
sites of sal-hapten-3 and sal-hapten-4 were derived at C-2´ and C-1, respectively.
213
Sal-hapten-3 possessed a two carbons spacer similar to that of sal-hapten-1, and
214
sal-hapten-4 had a longer spacer. It could be found that both resultant antibodies
215
raised from sal-hapten-3 and sal-hapten-4 recognized only salbutamol, still a similar
216
narrow specificity. This suggested that the hapten with a spacer at site C-2´ and C-1
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217
might be not suitable for a class specificity generation.
218
In the present investigation, the R-(–)-sal-hapten spacer was derived at C-2 ,
219
different from other three hapten spacer sites C-2´, C-1 and C-6 of previous four
220
reported sal-hapten 1-4, and the obtained antibody resulted from R-(–)-sal-hapten
221
could recognize 31 compounds within the tested 54 β-agonists and analogues (Table
222
1), this was the most class specificity to β-agonist compounds reported so far. Based
223
on the comparison of hapten structures and specificities above, it could be found that
224
these four hapten spacer sites C-2´, C-1, C-6 and C-2 could significantly differed the
225
specificity of the resultant antibody to β-agonist compounds.
226
3D QSAR analysis. In order to better understand the effect of hatpen spacer
227
sites on the antibody specificity to β-agonists, two 3D QSAR methods CoMFA and
228
CoMSIA were conducted for the structure-activity analysis.
229
Generation of 3D QSAR Models. The interactions between the antibody and
230
β-agonists were analyzed by CoMFA and CoMSIA models, and simulated the binding
231
process from electrostatic, steric and hydrophobic fields, respectively (Table S1). In
232
the CoMFA model, the q2 and r2 values were 0.560 and 0.972. The q2 and r2 of the
233
CoMSIA model were 0.530 and 0.978. All the parameters could prove the simulation
234
result was reliable. The scatter plots of the predicted value versus experimental
235
activity were shown in Figure S6 and the values of training set and test set molecules
236
were shown in Table S2. Since the activities could be well predicted by the two
237
models, this confirmed the enough accuracy of the models.
238
The contour maps reflected the effect of different group or structure on the
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Analytical Chemistry
239
molecular binding affinity in various force fields. In CoMFA model, from the view of
240
steric field (Figure 3a), green contours meant that bulk steric groups around this area
241
could improve the biding affinity, and yellow contours would exerted a reverse effect.
242
From the view of electrostatic field (Figure 3c), blue contours meant that positive
243
charges were favorable to a high affinity, and red contours would exert a reverse
244
effect. In CoMSIA model, from the view of hydrophobic field, magenta contours
245
represented that hydrophobicity increasing was favorable to a high affinity, and white
246
contours had a reverse effect (Figure 3e).
247
C-2´ Effect. The tertamyl at C-2´ in clenpenterol (39) was surrounded by a large
248
block of green and magenta contour (Figure 3a, 3f), and this suggested that a bulky or
249
hydrophobic substituent could be favored for the antibody biding. HYD (37) showed
250
low cross-reactivity (CR, 0.3%), this could be ascribed its unfavorable hydrophilicity
251
of the hydroxyl at C-2´ (ClogP, 1.392).
252
The steric field of tertamyl on clenpenterol (39) was larger than that of tert-butyl
253
on clenbuterol (36) or isopropyl on clenproperol (40) (Figure 1), and the
254
hydrophobicity (ClogP, 2.922) of tertamyl on clenpenterol was also higher than that of
255
the tert-butyl on clenbuterol (ClogP, 2.393) and the isopropyl on clenproperol (ClogP,
256
1.994). Thus, the cross-reactivity difference (12.8% for clenperterol, 2.9% for
257
clenbuterol and ND for clenproperol) was ascribed to the difference of both the steric
258
and hydrophobic fields at C-2´ of these compounds. Similarly, it was also ascribed to
259
the steric and hydrophobic field effects that six groups of molecules demonstrate
260
cross-reactivity difference. I) t-butylnorsynephrine (16) (CR, 571.4%) and
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octopamine (17) (CR, ND); II) cimbuterol (47) (CR, 4.4%) and cimaterol (48) (CR,
262
0.1%); III) mapenterol (43) (CR, 1.9%) and mabuterol (44) (CR, ND); IV) terbutaline
263
(11) (CR, 8.3%) and orciprenaline (12) (CR < 0.1%); V) colterol (7) (CR, 0.2%) and
264
isoproterenol (8) (CR, ND); VI) tulobuterol (45) (CR, 1.7%) and clorprenaline (46)
265
(CR, ND).
266
The yellow contour near C-2´ implied that a huge steric field on the tertamyl
267
would decrease the cross-reactivity. Thus, it was reasonable that those compounds
268
with bulky rings at C-2´ (e.g. arformoterol (29) (CR < 0.1%), olodaterol (31),
269
indacaterol (32), fenspiride (20), reproterol (22), ractopamine (24) and ritodrine (25)
270
(CR, ND)) demonstrated very low cross-reactivity even no recognition.
271
CoMFA analysis revealed that a stronger hydrophobic field near C-2´ could
272
increase cross-reactivity, but a huger steric field near C-2´ could decrease
273
cross-reactivity conversely. Clenhexerol (38) contained a bigger and stronger
274
hydrophobic tertiary hexyl at C-2´ (ClogP, 3.451) than the tertamyl on clenpenterol
275
(ClogP, 2.922) (Figure 1), however, its cross-reactivity was lower (CR, 9.7%) than
276
clenpenterol (CR, 12.8%). Similarly, salmeterol (35) owned a stronger hydrophobic
277
long carbon chain at C-2´ (ClogP, 3.063), its cross-reactivity (CR, 0.1%) was lower
278
than that of the weaker hydrophobic compounds R-(–)-TER (19) (ClogP, 1.816, CR,
279
4.7%) and S-(+)-TER (18) (ClogP, 1.816, CR, 0.4%). This suggested that the steric
280
and hydrophobic fields could exert effect together at C-2´, but the steric field played a
281
dominating role in the specificity modulation at C-2´.
282
CoMFA analysis also revealed that a bigger steric field at C-2´ than the isopropyl
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(e.g. the tert-butyl and tertamyl) could be conducive to a class specificity generation,
284
but the specificity would decline when the steric field continued to become larger (e.g.
285
the tertiary hexyl on clenhexerol). Compared the tert-butyl of R-(–)-sal-hapten with
286
the long spacer of sal-hapten-3, although the tert-butyl showed a smaller steric field
287
than sal-hapten-3 spacer, R-(–)-sal-hapten leaded to a better antibody binding to
288
clenbuterol (Table 1). Therefore, it suggested that the steric field of tert-butyl at C-2´
289
was beneficial to the cross-reactivity improvement. Moreover, the exposure of the
290
tert-butyl at C-2´ on the hapten was critical to obtain a class specific antibody.
291
Because one of the most important epitopes C-2´ of the hapten could not be exposed,
292
the raised antibody from sal-hapten-3 might have low cross-activity to a large
293
proportion of β-agonists and analogues with the hydrophobic groups at C-2´.
294
C-1 Effect. There were red and blue contours of electrostatic field near C-1
295
(Figure 3d), this suggested that hapten spacers connecting to site C-1 would damage
296
the electrostatic field around this site and would decrease specificity of the raised
297
antibody. Due to the electron donor inducing effect, the negative charge oxygen of the
298
phenolic hydroxyl at C-1 on R-(–)-salbutamol (3) (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, -0.322)
299
was completely exposed to the red contour, and the hydrogen with positive charge
300
(Gasteiger-Huckel charge, 0.258) was exposed to the blue contour (Figure 3d).
301
However, the negative charge nitrogen (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, -0.329) at C-1
302
amino group on clenbuterol (36) was surrounded by two positive charge hydrogens
303
(Gasteiger-Huckel charge, 0.182), this would stunt the nitrogen exposed to the red
304
contour (Figure 3c). Because of the exposed charge difference, the cross-reactivity of
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305
clenbuterol (CR, 2.9%) became much lower than that of R-(–)-salbutamol (CR,
306
100%).
307
QSAR analysis suggested that the exposure of the hydroxyl at C-1 on the hapten
308
would lead to a class specific antibody. In this present investigation, the hydroxyl
309
group at C-1 on R-(–)-sal-hapten was exposed, this would benefit to the antibody
310
recognition to these compounds with hydroxyl groups (e.g. salbutamol (1), colterol (7)
311
and carbuterol (28)) and amino groups (e.g. clenbuterol (36), brombuterol (42) and
312
cimbuterol (47)) at C-1. However, the spacer of sal-hapten-4 was derived at C-1, the
313
raised antibody exhibited a poor recognition to clenbuterol (CR < 1%),36 because the
314
hydroxyl at C-1 on the hapten was not exposed.
315
C-6 Effect. The blue contour suggested that increasing positive electricity at C-6
316
would be favorable for the binding affinity enhancing (Figure 3c). The hydrogen of
317
phenolic hydroxyl on terbutaline (11) possessed a stronger positive charge
318
(Gasteiger-Huckel charge, 0.257) than both bromine (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, -0.107)
319
of brombuterol (42) and chlorine (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, -0.125) of clenbuterol
320
(36). Therefore, the cross-reactivity of terbutaline (CR, 8.3%) was higher than those
321
of the other two analytes (CR, 3.2% for brombuterol and 2.9% for clenbuterol).
322
Similarly, mabuterol (44) could not be recognized (CR, ND) because it contained a
323
negative charge trifluoromethyl (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, -0.237) at C-6. Since there
324
were no substituents at C-6 on R-(–)-sal-hapten and the hydrogen carried a positive
325
charge (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, 0.017), adding negative charge at C-6 on the hapten
326
would be favorable for the antibody recognition to the compounds contained negative
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327
charge groups at C-6.
328
There were yellow and white contours (steric and hydrophobic fields) near C-6
329
on sal-hapten-1 and 2 (Figure 3a, 3e), QSAR revealed that the bulky and hydrophobic
330
groups near C-6 would decrease the binding affinity, and thus be beneficial to
331
generate narrow specificity antibody. Although the hydrogen on methoxyl group of
332
DIM (13) possessed stronger positive electricity (Gasteiger-Huckel charge, 0.059)
333
than brombuterol and clenbuterol, DIM still showed a lower binding affinity (CR,
334
1.3%). This could be ascribed that the influence of steric field at C-6 was stronger
335
than the electric field.
336
The hapten spacers of sal-hapten-1 and sal-hapten-2 were derived at C-6.
337
CoMFA analysis revealed that the electrostatic field near C-6 could play an important
338
role on antibody specificity. The negative charge nitrogen of sal-hapten-2 spacer could
339
enhance the recognition of the raised antibody to the negative charge groups at C-6,
340
such as the chlorine on clenbuterol, and thus the cross-reactivity of clenbuterol (CR,
341
107%) became higher than that of salbutamol (CR, 100%) and terbutaline (CR, 10%).
342
It could be inferred that the raised antibody from sal-hapten-2 might recognize those
343
compounds with negative charge groups at C-6, but the recognition to those
344
compounds with positive charge at C-6 might decline. Therefore, the electric charge
345
of the hapten spacer at C-6 could affect the specificity spectrum of the resultant
346
antibody.
347
Sal-hapten-1 spacer contained only one carbon between the benzene ring of
348
salbutamol and the carrier protein (BSA) at C-6. This spacer and the carrier protein
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349
could increase the steric hindrance, and then hinder the exposure of the hydroxyl
350
hydrogen at C-1 to the blue contour between C-1 and C-6. Therefore, the recognition
351
of the raised antibody to the compounds with hydroxyl or amino groups at C-1 would
352
decrease. This may be the reason that the obtained antibody against sal-hapten-1
353
could not recognize clenbuterol (CR < 0.1%).
354
C-2 Effect. The magenta, yellow and green contours were around C-2 (Figure 3a,
355
3e), this suggested that the steric field would exert effect together with the
356
hydrophobic field. The steric field of the methyl (3D-SAL (15)), the hydrogen
357
(t-butylnorsynephrine (16)) and the hydroxymethyl (R-(–)-salbutamol (3)) at C-2 was
358
weak (Figure 1). However, the methyl in 3D-SAL (ClogP, 1.598) and the hydrogen of
359
t-butylnorsynephrine (ClogP, 1.149) showed stronger hydrophobicity than the
360
hydroxymethyl of R-(–)-salbutamol (ClogP, 0.061). The cross-reactivity of 3D-SAL
361
(CR, 2285.7%) and t-butylnorsynephrine (CR, 571.4%) was higher than that of
362
R-(–)-salbutamol (CR, 100%), this suggested that the hydrophobic field on the three
363
compounds above played a dominant role in antibody binding.
364
Although bitolterol (23) contained a strong hydrophobic benzene ring at C-1 and
365
C-2 (ClogP, 5.590), the yellow contour far away from C-2 also induced a bulky steric
366
field. Since the effect of the hydrophobic was opposite to that of the steric field, and
367
the cross-reactivity of bitolterol was very low (CR, 2.6%), it could be inferred that the
368
steric field effect was stronger than its hydrophobic field effect at C-2 on bitolterol.
369
Compared with the phenolic hydroxyl group of colterol (7) at C-2 (ClogP, 0.552),
370
although the hydroxymethyl group of R-(–)-salbutamol (3) decreased the
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hydrophobicity (ClogP, 0.061), R-(–)-salbutamol (CR, 100%) still showed a higher
372
cross-reactivity than that of colterol (CR, 0.2%). Because QSAR analysis had
373
revealed that the steric field could exert a positive effect to the binding affinity
374
enhancement, it could be induced that the steric field at C-2 on colterol exerted a
375
stronger influence on the specificity more than the hydrophobic field.
376
The green and magenta contours were near C-2 on R-(–)-salbutamol (Figure 3b,
377
3e), this suggested that the optimal spacer needed strong steric and hydrophobic fields
378
near C-2. The three carbons spacer of R-(–)-sal-hapten was a suitable sized steric field
379
for the antibody generation with a class specificity. In this present investigation the
380
succinate spacer of R-(–)-sal-hapten contained a hydrophobic ester group at C-2, and
381
this hydrophobic group would increase the binding affinity. Therefore, it was
382
reasonable that the obtained antibody demonstrated recognition up to 31 β-agonist
383
compounds.
384
Chiral effect. S-(+)-salbutamol and R-(–)-salbutamol showed difference in the
385
orientation of the hydroxyl connected to chiral carbon at C-1´ (Figure 3g, 3h). The
386
hydroxyl was a hydrophilic group, it would decrease the hydrophobicity of the region
387
if it was inserted into the hydrophobic cavity (magenta contours) at C-2´ of
388
salbutamol. This was the reason that the cross reactivity of S-(+)-salbutamol (CR,
389
1.7%) and S-(+)-TER (CR, 0.4%) were much lower than R-(–)-salbutamol (CR, 100%)
390
and R-(–)-TER (CR, 4.7%).
391
It was known that ractopamine, another usual banned β-agonist in China,
392
contained a similar chiral carbon like salbutamol at C-1´. In the previous investigation
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393
on antibody binding of ractopamine stereoisomer, the (1R,3R)-ractopamine also
394
exhibited much higher cross-reactivity (CR, 489%) than (1S,3R)-ractopamine (CR,
395
134%).37 This indicated that levo-isomer ractopamine could demonstrate a stronger
396
class specificity. Similarly, comparing the structure between R-(–)-salbutamol (3) and
397
salbutamon (5), the only difference was that the latter contained a carbonyl group
398
instead of the chiral hydrophilic hydroxyl group at C-1´of the former. However, this
399
slight structure change made an extremely difference in activity, salbutamon could not
400
be recognized by the obtained antibody (CR, ND) in the present investigation,
401
compared to the significant high cross reactivity (CR, 100%) for R-(-)-salbutamol.
402
Therefore, it could be induced that the chirality characteristic at C-1´was essential for
403
the antibody binding to β-agonist compounds.
404
Sample analysis. To confirm the accuracy of the class specific immunoassay for
405
samples, swine urine was chosen and spiked with β-agonists (salbutamol, clenbuterol,
406
brombuterol and cimbuterol as the model drugs) for the recovery evaluation. When
407
the urine was diluted 5-fold with PBST, the IC50 for salbutamol in 5-fold diluted urine
408
was close to that for salbutamol in PBST (Figure S4). Therefore, swine urine sample
409
was diluted 5-fold with PBST to eliminate the matrix interference for the further
410
ELISA analysis. The recovery for the four β-agonists ranged from 81.8% to 118.3%,
411
the coefficient of variation (CV) was below 15% (Table 2), this could meet the
412
requirement of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on recovery.38
413
To confirm the reliability of the proposed ciELISA, all spiked urine samples
414
were also measured by HPLC-MS. It is found that the retention times for salbutamol,
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Analytical Chemistry
415
clenbuterol, brombuterol and cimbuterol were at 2.0, 5.6, 6.5 and 2.9 min by
416
HPLC-MS (Figure S5). The correlation coefficients R2 were all higher than 0.96
417
(Table 2), and this confirmed that the results from ELISA had a good agreement with
418
that from HPLC-MS.
419 420
CONCLUSION
421
In summary, using an R-(–)-salbutamol derivative as the chiral immunizing
422
hapten, a class specific antibody to β-agonists and analogue was obtained. The QSAR
423
analysis revealed that strong steric and hydrophobic fields near the hapten spacer site
424
C-2 as well as a chirality at C-1´, was crucial to the class specificity of the raised
425
antibody to β-agonist compounds. However, once the spacer was linked to sites C-1 or
426
C-2´ of a salbutamol hapten, only a narrow specific antibody would be raised. And the
427
spacer charge at C-6 could affect the specificity spectrum of the resultant antibody. A
428
ciELISA was successfully established for sensitive recognition of 31 β-agonists and
429
possible analogues for the first time. With a good agreement to HPLC-MS method,
430
the proposed ciELISA was proved to be reliable for the rapid surveillance screening
431
assay of β-agonists in urine sample. This investigation will also be beneficial to better
432
understanding the class specificity mechanism and to rationally design and control the
433
immunoassay development.
434 435 436
ASSOCIATED CONTENT Supporting Information. Experimental section of hapten-protein conjugates
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437
preparation, antibody production, ciELISA method and molecular modeling. Figure of
438
experimental and calculated ECD spectra of R-(–)-sal-hapten. Description of the
439
identification of hapten-protein conjugates and reduced SDS-PAGE of purified
440
R-(–)-salbutamol antibody, calibration curves of matrix effects in urine sample,
441
HPLC-MS of 4 β-agonists, summary of calculated parameters of 3D QSAR models
442
and the activity values of training and test set molecules.
443 444
AUTHOR INFORMALTION
445
Corresponding author
446
*Email for Lei H. :
[email protected]. Phone: +8620-8528-3925. Fax:
447
+8620-8528-0270.
448
Notes
449
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
450 451
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
452
This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development
453
Program of China (SQ2017YFC160089, 2016YFE0106000), Natural Science
454
Foundation
455
S2013030013338), Guangdong and Guangzhou Planned Program in Science and
456
Technology (2016201604030004, 2017B020207010), Russian Science Foundation
457
(14-16-00149).
of
China
and
Guangdong
(31701703,
458
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31601555,
U1301214,
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Table 1 Specificity comparison of antibodies raised from various derived salbutamol
534
hapten
Molecules 3D-SAL t-butylnorsynephrine R-(–)-salbutamol carbuterol Rac-salbutamol DAH clenpenterol clenhexerol terbutaline salbutamol methyl ether R-(–)-TER cimbuterol bromoclenbuterol brombuterol clenbuterol bitolterol mapenterol S-(+)-salbutamol tulobuterol pirbuterol DIM pindolol S-(+)-TER HYD colterol 5-hydroxy salbutamol cimaterol salmeterol penbutolol orciprenaline propafenone arformoterol alprenolol ractopamine mabuterol clorprenaline
R-(–)-sal-hapten (this investigation) IC50 (nmol L-1) 0.07 2285.7 0.3 571.4 1.6 100 4.4 36.4 5.1 31.4 6.8 23.5 12.5 12.8 16.5 9.7 19.3 8.3 27.3 5.8 33.5 4.7 36.4 4.4 38.9 4.1 50.5 3.2 54.5 2.9 60.5 2.6 84.8 1.9 91.7 1.7 94.0 1.7 116.3 1.4 123.4 1.3 301.3 0.5 436.7 0.4 551.7 0.3 643.6 0.2 905.7 0.1 1178.5 0.1 1258.4 0.1 1464.7 0.1 2494.8 0.1 3111.2 0.1 3449.4