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1.
Hemophilia A, a life-threatening bleeding disorder, is caused by deficiency of factor VIII (FVIII). Replacement therapy using rFVIII is the first line therapy for hemophilia A. However, 15-30% of patients develop neutralizing antibody, mainly against the C2, A3 and A2 domains. It has been reported that PS-FVIII complex reduced total and neutralizing anti-rFVIII antibody titers in hemophilia A murine models. Here, we developed FVIII-containing cochleate cylinders, utilizing PS-Ca2+ interactions and characterized these particles for optimal in vivo properties using biophysical and biochemical techniques. Approximately 75% of the protein was associated with cochleate cylinders. Sandwich ELISA, acrylamide quenching and enzymatic digestion studies established that rFVIII was shielded from the bulk aqueous phase by the lipidic structures, possibly leading to improved in vivo stability. Freeze-thawing and rate-limiting diffusion studies revealed that small cochleate cylinders with a particle size of 500 nm or less could be generated. The release kinetics and in vivo experiments suggested that there is slow and sustained release of FVIII from the complex upon systemic exposure. In vivo studies using tail clip method indicated that FVIII-cochleate complex is effective and protects hemophilic mice from bleeding. Based on these studies, we speculate that the molecular interaction between FVIII and PS may provide a basis for the design of novel FVIII lipidic structures for delivery applications.  相似文献   

2.
Characterization of recombinant human factor VIII   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Recently, complete human factor VIII DNA clones have been obtained and subsequently expressed in baby hamster kidney cells (Wood, W. I., Capon, D. J., Simonsen, C. C., Eaton, D. L., Gitschier, J., Keyt, B., Seeburg, P. H., Smith, D. H., Hollingshead, P., Wion, K. L., Delwart, E., Tuddenham, E. G. D., Vehar, G. A., and Lawn, R. M. (1984) Nature 312, 330-337). The recombinant factor VIII (rVIII) protein secreted from these cells has now been purified allowing its structural analysis and comparison to plasma-derived factor VIII (pdVIII). Analysis of purified rVIII by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that it consists of multiple polypeptides with relative mobilities (Mr) ranging from 80,000-210,000. The same pattern of polypeptides is also observed for pdVIII resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The proteins associated with rVIII are recognized by pdVIII antibodies in a Western blot. When rVIII and pdVIII are subjected to isoelectric focusing they are resolved into a similar pattern of protein bands. Thrombin, factor Xa, and activated protein C, which modulate factor VIII activity by proteolysis, process rVIII in the same manner they do pdVIII. As is the case for pdVIII, thrombin activation of rVIII coagulant activity correlates with the generation of subunits with Mr of 73,000, 50,000 and 43,000. These subunits appear to form a metal-(perhaps Ca2+) linked complex. EDTA inactivates thrombin-activated rVIII and pdVIII, with the activity being regenerated after the addition of a molar excess of MnCl2. The results suggest that rVIII is structurally and functionally very similar to pdVIII.  相似文献   

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Human factor VIII was purified from commercial factor VIII concentrate with a 12% yield. The specific coagulant activity of purified factor VIII was 8,000 units/mg. In the presence of SDS the purified factor VIII consisted of a variety of polypeptides on polyacrylamide gels, ranging between Mr 80,000 and Mr 208,000. In the absence of SDS the purified factor VIII showed an apparent molecular weight of 270,000 upon Sephadex G200 gel-filtration. The purified factor VIII could be activated by thrombin, which resulted in the disappearance of Mr 108,000-208,000 polypeptides in favor of an Mr 92,000 polypeptide. Treatment with factor Xa also activated factor VIII, whereas treatment with activated protein C resulted in the inactivation of coagulant activity. Coagulant-active 125I-factor VIII was prepared using a lactoperoxidase radioiodination procedure. This 125I-factor had the same characteristics as unlabeled factor VIII. All polypeptides could be precipitated with monoclonal antibodies directed against factor VIII. With 125I-factor VIII a pIapp of 5.7 was found in the presence of urea.  相似文献   

6.
Aggregation of proteins is a major problem in their use as drugs and is also involved in a variety of pathological diseases. In this study, biophysical techniques were employed to investigate aggregate formation in the pharmaceutically important protein, recombinant human factor VIII (rhFVIII). Recombinant human factor VIII incubated in solution at 37 degrees C formed soluble aggregates as detected by molecular sieve chromatography and dynamic light scattering. This resulted in a corresponding loss of biological activity. Fluorescence and CD spectra of the thermally stressed rhFVIII samples did not, however, suggest significant differences in protein conformation. To identify conformational changes in rhFVIII that may be involved in rhFVIII aggregation, temperature and solutes were used to perturb the native structure of rhFVIII. Far-UV CD and FTIR studies of rhFVIII as a function of temperature revealed conformational changes corresponding to an increase in intermolecular beta-sheet content beginning at approximately 45 degrees C with significant aggregation observed above 60 degrees C. Fluorescence and DSC studies of rhFVIII also indicated conformational changes initiating between 45 and 50 degrees C. An increase in the exposure of hydrophobic surfaces was observed beginning at approximately 40 degrees C, as monitored by increased binding of the fluorescent probe, bis-anilinonaphthalene sulfonic acid (bis-ANS). Perturbation by various solutes produced several transitions prior to extensive unfolding of rhFVIII. In all cases, a common transition, characterized by an increase in the wavelength of the fluorescence emission maximum of rhFVIII from approximately 330 to 335 nm, was observed during thermal and solute perturbation of factor VIII. Moreover, this transition was correlated with an increased association of factor VIII upon incubation at 37 degrees C in the presence of various solutes. These results suggest that association of rhFVIII in solution was initiated by a small transition in the tertiary structure of the protein which produced a nucleating species that led to the formation of inactive soluble aggregates.  相似文献   

7.
Cryo-electron microscopy has the power to visualise lipid membranes at the closest to in vivo conditions. The structure of the lipid bilayer can be well resolved and the interactions between lipid-protein and protein-protein molecules followed at the molecular level. We undertook an extended Cryo-electron microscopy study to follow the factor VIII binding to phosphatidylserine containing lipid nanotubes at different lipid composition. Obtaining well ordered tubes is required to define the factor VIII membrane-bound structure. The observed alterations in the arrangement of the protein molecules are indicative for the flexibility of the membrane-bound factor VIII. Understanding the significance of these conformational changes is essential to comprehend the function of factor VIII in coagulation and as a drug for Hemophilia A.  相似文献   

8.
Optimal rates of factor X (FX) activation require occupancy of receptors for factor IXa (FIXa), factor VIII (FVIII), and FX on the activated platelet surface. The presence of FVIII and FX increases 5-fold the affinity of FIXa for the surface of activated platelets, and the presence of FVIII or FVIIIa generates a high affinity, low capacity specific FX-binding site on activated platelets. We have now examined the effects of FX and active site-inhibited FIXa (EGR-FIXa) on the binding of both FVIII and FVIIIa to activated platelets and show the following: (a) von Willebrand factor inhibits FVIII binding (K(i) = 0.54 nM) but not FVIIIa binding; (b) thrombin and the thrombin receptor activation peptide (SFLLRN amide) are the most potent agonists required for FVIII-binding site expression, whereas ADP is inert; (c) FVa does not compete with FVIIIa or FVIII for functional platelet-binding sites; and (d) Annexin V is a potent inhibitor of FVIIIa binding (IC(50) = 10 nM) to activated platelets. The A2 domain of FVIII significantly increases the affinity and stoichiometry of FVIIIa binding to platelets and contributes to the stability of the FX-activating complex. Both FVIII and FVIIIa binding were specific, saturable, and reversible. FVIII binds to specific, high affinity receptors on activated platelets (n = 484 +/- 59; K(d) = 3.7 +/- 0.31 nM) and FVIIIa interacts with an additional 300-500 sites per platelet with enhanced affinity (K(d) = 1.5 +/- 0.11 nM). FVIIIa binding to activated platelets in the presence of FIXa and FX is closely coupled with rates of F-X activation. The presence of EGR-FIXa and FX increases both the number and the affinity of binding sites on activated platelets for both FVIII and FVIIIa, emphasizing the validity of a three-receptor model in the assembly of the F-X-activating complex on the platelet surface.  相似文献   

9.
Hemophilia A is caused by a deficiency in coagulation factor VIII. Recombinant factor VIII can be used as an alternative although it is unavailable for most patients. Here, we describe the production of a human recombinant B-domain-deleted FVIII (rBDDFVIII) by the human cell line SK-HEP-1, modified by a lentiviral vector rBDDFVIII was produced by recombinant SK-HEP cells (rSK-HEP) at 1.5-2.1 IU/10(6) in 24 h. The recombinant factor had increased in vitro stability when compared to commercial pdFVIII. The functionality of rBDDFVIII was shown by its biological activity and by tail-clip challenge in hemophilia A mice. The rSK-HEP cells grew in a scalable system and produced active rBDDFVIII, indicating that this platform production can be optimized to meet the commercial production scale needs.  相似文献   

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D D Pittman  J H Wang  R J Kaufman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3315-3325
Sulfated tyrosine residues within recombinant human factor VIII were identified by [35S]sulfate biosynthetic labeling of Chinese hamster ovary cells which express human recombinant factor VIII. Alkaline hydrolysis of purified [35S]sulfate-labeled factor VIII showed that greater than 95% of the [35S]sulfate was incorporated into tyrosine. [3H]Tyrosine and [35S]sulfate double labeling was used to quantify the presence of 6 mol of tyrosine sulfate per mole of factor VIII. Amino acid sequence analysis of thrombin and tryptic peptides isolated from [35S]sulfate-labeled factor VIII demonstrated tyrosine sulfate at residue 346 in the factor VIII heavy chain and at residues 1664 and 1680 in the factor VIII light chain. In addition, the carboxyl-terminal half of the A2 domain contained three tyrosine sulfate residues, likely at positions 718, 719, and 723. Interestingly, all sites of tyrosine sulfation border thrombin cleavage sites. The functional importance of tyrosine sulfation was examined by treatment of cells expressing factor VIII with sodium chlorate, a potent inhibitor of tyrosine sulfation. Increasing concentrations of sodium chlorate inhibited sulfate incorporation into factor VIII without affecting its synthesis and/or secretion. However, factor VIII secreted in the presence of sodium chlorate exhibited a 5-fold reduction in procoagulant activity, although the protein was susceptible to thrombin cleavage. These results suggest that tyrosine sulfation is required for full factor VIII activity and may affect the interaction of factor VIII with other components of the coagulation cascade.  相似文献   

12.
Recombinant coagulation factor VIII (r-VIII SQ) was chemically modified with monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) (mPEG). Three mPEG derivatives were used for coupling to the r-VIII SQ lysines, a mixed anhydride of monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) succinic acid (mPEG-SAH), monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) succinimidyl succinate (mPEG-SS), and monomethoxy poly(ethylene glycol) tresylate (mPEG-TRES). A consequence of the modification with all derivatives was a substantial reduction in coagulant activity, even at very low degrees of modification. A method was developed with the purpose of avoiding conjugation at certain important biological sites on the factor VIII and thereby producing conjugates with better retained activity. This was achieved by immobilizing the protein onto a solid matrix during the modification reaction. Characterization of conjugates by SDS-PAGE, western blots, interaction with von Willebrand factor (vWf), and thrombin activation/inactivation analyses was undertaken. The SDS-PAGE and western blots revealed coupling heterogeneity regarding degree of modification. The amount of factor VIII able to bind to vWf decreased with the conjugation. Thrombin activated the modified factor VIII to essentially the same extent as the reference preparation of r-VIII SQ. Inactivation of the modified factor VIII was, however, slower than inactivation of the unmodified protein. Finally, an in vitro study was performed to evaluate the influence of the mPEG modification on the protein stability in extract of porcine tissue. Despite that conjugates with low degrees of modification were included in the study, the coagulant activity was preserved to a significantly higher extent in all incubation mixtures containing conjugates compared to that with unmodified protein.  相似文献   

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A putative mature human neutrophil chemotactic factor (NCF) corresponding to the C-terminal 72 amino acids of its precursor was directly produced in Escherichia coli by recombinant DNA technology. Human NCF was present in both the soluble and insoluble protein fractions of the homogenate of host cells, and it was partially purified as a water-soluble polypeptide from both fractions, separately. The partially purified NCF preparation was highly purified to an endotoxin-free homogeneous polypeptide by means of CM-Sepharose CL-6B column chromatography and gel filtration on Toyopearl HW-55. No difference between the human NCF preparations purified from both starting materials could be found concerning purity, primary structure, solubility, molecular weight, and chemotactic activity for human neutrophils. The amino acid sequence of recombinant human NCF was identical to the sequence deduced from the cDNA sequence. A methionine residue due to the translation initiation codon was removed. Recombinant human NCF was found to be biologically active and to exhibit chemotactic activity for human neutrophils in vitro and cause a neutrophil infiltration in vivo in mice.  相似文献   

15.
Recombinant human differentiation-stimulating factor (rhD-factor) has been isolated to greater than 95% purity from Chinese hamster ovary cells. RhD-factor is a glycoprotein with an apparent molecular weight of 45.6 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. On gel filtration in 6 M guanidine-hydrochloride, rhD-factor elutes with an apparent molecular weight of 21.5 kDa; it elutes with an apparent molecular weight of 44.8 kDa under neutral pH (native) conditions. The amino-terminal sequence (12 residues) is consistent with the expected sequence derived from the genomic DNA sequence. Recombinant D-factor is heavily glycosylated with 30% by weight neutral sugar and 12% sialic acid. The ED50 for rhD-factor was 0.25 ng/ml. Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid-deglycosylated rhD-factor has a biological activity comparable to that of the native recombinant protein (ED50 = 0.40 ng/ml). The biological activity of rhD-factor was stable at pH 1 for 40 h, in 6 M guanidine-HCl containing buffers with or without reducing agent, and in 1% SDS. Carboxymethylation of D-factor after reduction totally destroyed biological activity.  相似文献   

16.
Recombinant-derived human Factor VIII was labeled intrinsically with [35S]methionine, and its binding to washed human platelets was studied. Binding measurements were performed by incubating Factor VIII and platelets for 15 min at room temperature in Tyrode's solution supplemented with Ca2+ (5.0 mM), 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (5.0 mM), 0.50% bovine serum albumin, and the Factor Xa and thrombin inhibitors 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonylglutamylglycinylarginyl chloromethyl ketone and 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-arginine-N-(3-ethyl-1, 5-pentanediyl)amide. Separation of free from bound Factor VIII was accomplished by centrifugation through oil, and nonspecific binding was determined with excess unlabeled Factor VIII. Binding was saturable, reversible, and stimulated 20-fold after platelet activation with thrombin. Furthermore, binding was specific in that bound labeled Factor VIII could be displaced by excess unlabeled Factor VIII, but not by Factor V. Scatchard analysis indicated a single class of binding sites with Kd = 2.9 nM and 450 sites/activated platelet. The time course of displacement indicated a t1/2 of bound Factor VIII of approximately 5 min. When platelets were incubated in Ca2+, both the heavy and light chains of Factor VIII were bound, whereas exposure to EDTA resulted in the binding of the light chain only. These results demonstrate the specific reversible binding of Factor VIII to human platelets, likely mediated through the light chain.  相似文献   

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This review covers recent studies on the characterization of the dynamics of lipidic nanostructures formed via self-assembly processes. The focus is placed on two main topics: First, an overview of advanced experimental small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) setups combined with various sample manipulation techniques including, for instance, stop-flow mixing or rapid temperature-jump perturbation is given. Second, our recent synchrotron SAXS findings on the dynamic structural response of gold nanoparticle-loaded vesicles upon exposure to an ultraviolet light source, the impact of rapidly mixing negatively charged vesicles with calcium ions, and in?situ hydration-induced formation of inverted-type liquid-crystalline phases loaded with the local anesthetic bupivacaine are summarized. These in?situ time-resolved experiments allow real-time monitoring of the dynamics of the structural changes and the possible formation of intermediate states in the millisecond to second range. The need for investigating self-assembled systems, mainly stimuli-responsive drug nanocarriers, under nonequilibrium conditions is discussed. For pharmaceutically relevant applications, it is essential to combine these investigations with appropriate in?vitro and in?vivo studies.  相似文献   

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The synthesis, processing, and secretion of factor VIII expressed from heterologous genes introduced into Chinese hamster ovary cells has been studied. The results show factor VIII to be synthesized as a primary translation product of approximately 230 kDa that can be detected in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. In this compartment, the majority of the factor VIII is in a complex with a resident protein of the endoplasmic reticulum, binding protein, and may never appear in the medium. Some factor VIII transits the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus, where it is cleaved to generate the mature heavy and light chains. In the absence of von Willebrand factor in the medium, the secreted heavy and light chains are unassociated and subsequently degraded. In the presence of von Willebrand factor in the medium, the heavy and light chains are secreted as a stable complex and activity accumulates linearly with time. The utilization and complexity of asparagine-linked carbohydrate present on the secreted recombinant-derived factor VIII and human plasma-derived factor VIII were compared and found to be very similar. In both cases, the asparagine-linked carbohydrate moieties on the heavy chain are primarily of the hybrid or complex-type. In contrast, the factor VIII from both sources contains a high-mannose type of asparagine-linked carbohydrate on the light chain.  相似文献   

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