Phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE-5) inhibitors are commonly used to treat erectile dysfunction. There is a problem with synthesis and illegal use of a wide range of analogues of the licenced drugs and a simple class-wide analytical method is required. In this work, based on structural modelling, we developed an immunological method using norneovardenafil as a hapten as it contains only the general sub-structure and the common features of sildenafil-like adulterants, such as hydrophobic centres, hydrogen-bond donor atoms and hydrogen-bond acceptor atoms. Thus theoretically it could induce production of antibody which could recognise multiple sildenafil-like adulterants. By immunising rabbits, a group-specific polyclonal antibody was obtained with the desired broad-spectrum molecular recognition performance against sildenafil-like adulterants. Then, an indirect competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (icELISA) was developed for the detection of sildenafil-like adulterants in herbal spirit drinks. Under the optimised conditions, the icELISA method showed broad linear ranges for acetildenafil, sildenafil and vardenafil respectively of 0.7 to 27.7 μg/kg, 1.0 to 70.7 μg/kg and 1.5 to 22.7 μg/kg, with half-maximal inhibition concentration (IC50) values of 4.5 μg/kg, 8.3 μg/kg and 5.7 μg/kg, respectively. For eleven herbal spirit drinks, there was good agreement between total levels of sildenafil-like adulterants measured by icELISA and levels of each of four individual adulterants determined by LC-MS/MS. In short, the developed icELISA can be employed for rapid and simple screening for adulteration of herbal spirit drinks with sildenafil-like compounds.
Keywords: Sildenafil-like adulterants; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; polyclonal antibody.