The doctor at the centre of the football doping scandal has had his contract with his private London clinic terminated.
Mark Bonar, 38, charged stars thousands of pounds for performance-enhancing drug programmes, according to an undercover investigation by The Sunday Times.
He allegedly prescribed banned drugs - including erythropoietin (EPO), steroids and human growth hormone - to 150 sportsmen, including Premier League footballers.
The Omniya Clinic, where Dr Bonar rented consulting rooms to treat his private patients, revealed it had ended its professional services agreement with him on Friday.
The General Medical Council (GMC) confirmed that while Dr Bonar is registered with them, he does not have a licence to practise medicine in the UK.
It also revealed he is facing disciplinary hearings that could see him struck off for a separate allegation of providing a patient with inadequate care.
Culture Secretary John Whittingdale has called for an urgent inquiry into the sport doping claims, saying he was "shocked and deeply concerned".
Part of the inquiry will focus on the taxpayer-funded UK Anti-Doping (UKAD) watchdog, which was apparently given evidence on the matter two years ago, but failed to take action.
Dr Bonar was secretly filmed allegedly making a series of disclosures in meetings with undercover reporters from the Sunday newspaper.
In the meetings, the doctor claimed his network of "clients" included a cricketer, cyclists and tennis players.
Several Premier League footballers were also among his clients, the doctor told reporters.
He claimed he had treated Arsenal, Chelsea, Leicester City and Birmingham City players - but the clubs have strongly denied the allegations.
And The Sunday Times makes it clear it has no independent evidence that Dr Bonar actually treated the players and only has his word for it.
Since 2010, he claims to have treated more than 150 sports people from the UK and abroad.
Dr Bonar denied the allegations when they were put to him by the newspaper.
UK Anti-Doping (UKAD) said it was "shocked" by the allegations in The Sunday Times and would order an independent review.
Chief executive Nicole Sapstead said UKAD began an investigation into Dr Bonar in 2014 after information supplied by a sportsperson.
The sportsperson went on to supply UKAD with handwritten prescriptions, allegedly issued by Dr Bonar.
But Ms Sapstead said the organisation was unable to act because Dr Bonar was not governed by any sport.
UKAD said the doctor fell outside its jurisdiction and it did not believe there were grounds to refer the case to the GMC.
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