von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a promising target for developing antithrombotic drugs. The absenc... more von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a promising target for developing antithrombotic drugs. The absence of accessible animal models impedes the study of specific human VWF (huVWF) targeting molecules in thrombosis. huVWF is not functional in the mouse because of a lack of interaction between huVWF and murine glycoprotein Ib. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have replaced single or multiple amino acids in huVWF with their murine counterparts to eliminate species incompatibility. Using hydrodynamic injection, we have expressed the different chimeric VWF constructs into VWF−/− mice. Only huVWF with a complete murine A1 domain insertion was able to correct bleeding in vivo and form occlusive thrombi in mesenteric vessels after FeCl3 treatment. Using this model, we tested the antithrombotic effect of monoclonal antibodies against huVWF, blocking its interaction with collagens (mAbs 203 and 505) or with glycoprotein IIbIIIa (mAb 9). The 3 mAbs inhibited the thrombotic process in arterioles ...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
Several therapeutic self-proteins elicit immune responses when administered to patients. Such adv... more Several therapeutic self-proteins elicit immune responses when administered to patients. Such adverse immune responses reduce drug efficacy. To induce an immune response, a protein must interact with different immune cells, including antigen-presenting cells, T cells, and B cells. Each cell type recognizes distinct immunogenic patterns on antigens. Mannose-terminating glycans have been identified as pathogen-associated molecular patterns that are essential for internalization of microbes by antigen-presenting cells, leading to presentation. Here, we have investigated the importance of exposed mannosylation on an immunogenic therapeutic self-protein, procoagulant human factor VIII (FVIII). Administration of therapeutic FVIII to hemophilia A patients induces inhibitory anti-FVIII antibodies in up to 30% of the cases. We demonstrate that entry of FVIII into human dendritic cells (DC) leading to T cell activation, is mediated by mannose-terminating glycans on FVIII. Further, we identifi...
Alloimmune responses to intravenously administered protein therapeutics are the most common cause... more Alloimmune responses to intravenously administered protein therapeutics are the most common cause of failure of replacement therapy in patients with defective levels of endogenous proteins. Such a situation is encountered in some patients with hemophilia A, who develop inhibitory anti-factor (F)VIII alloantibodies after administration of FVIII to treat hemorrhages. The nature of the secondary lymphoid organs involved in the initiation of immune responses to human therapeutic has not been studied. We therefore investigated this in the case of FVIII, a self-derived exogenous protein therapeutic. The distribution of intravenously administered FVIII was followed after FVIII-deficient mice were injected with radiolabeled FVIII and using immunohistochemistry. The role of the spleen and antigen-presenting cells (APC) in the onset of the anti-FVIII immune response was analyzed upon splenectomy or treatment of the mice with APC-depleting compounds. FVIII preferentially accumulated in the spleen at the level of metallophilic macrophages in the marginal zone (MZ). Surgical removal of the spleen or selective in vivo depletion of macrophages and CD11c-positive CD8 alpha-negative dendritic cells resulted in a drastic reduction in anti-FVIII immune responses. Using FVIII-deficient mice as a model for patients with hemophilia A, and human pro-coagulant FVIII as a model for immunogenic self-derived protein therapeutics, our results highlight the importance of the spleen and MZ APCs in the initiation of immune responses to protein therapeutics. Identification of the receptors implicated in retention of protein therapeutics in the MZ may pave the way towards novel strategies aimed at reducing their immunogenicity.
SummaryAurin tricarboxylic acid (ATA) is known to inhibit ristocetin-induced platelet agglutinati... more SummaryAurin tricarboxylic acid (ATA) is known to inhibit ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination but not arachidonic acid-, epinephrine- or ADP-induced aggregation. Its capacity to abolish human von Willebrand factor (vWF)-platelet interactions was further investigated by measurement of platelet adhesion to collagen, platelet agglutination tests and binding studies. In flowing blood using parallel-plate perfusion chambers and human collagen, ATA inhibited platelet adhesion to completion in a dose-dependent manner only at the highest shear rate tested (2,600 s–1). It was without effect at 100 and 650 s–1. ATA completely abolished vWF-dependent platelet agglutination induced by ristocetin, botrocetin and asialo-vWF, respectively. 125I-vWF binding to ristocetin- and botrocetin-treated platelets, to heparin and to sulfatides as well as 125I-botrocetin binding to vWF was competitively inhibited by ATA. By contrast, binding of 125I-vWF to collagen was not affected. To further localize ...
Type IIA and IIB von Willebrand disease (vWD) result from qualitative abnormalities of von Willeb... more Type IIA and IIB von Willebrand disease (vWD) result from qualitative abnormalities of von Willebrand factor (vWF) characterized by an absence in plasma of high molecular weight vWF multimers and an abnormal reactivity of vWF towards platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ib, which is decreased in type IIA and increased in type IIB. In this report, we describe the case of a patient having a IIA vWD phenotype associated with an intermittent thrombocytopenia atypical in this subtype but observed in type IIB vWD. The patient plasma vWF showed an absence of high molecular weight and intermediate multimers and had a decreased binding capacity to GPIb. The affinity of botrocetin was normal for plasma vWF from the propositus. Analysis of the propositus vWF gene showed the presence of a substitution Val 551 to Phe of the mature vWF subunit. This mutation is localized within a 509-695 disulphide loop of the vWF that plays an important role in the binding to GPIb and is where most of the molecular defect...
We compared the properties of plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) from normal individuals and from... more We compared the properties of plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) from normal individuals and from two patients with type IIA (Glu875Lys) and type IIB (duplication of Met 540) von Willebrand disease (vWD) with the corresponding fully multimerized recombinant proteins. We included cryosupernatant from normal human plasma and type IIA plasma (Cys509Arg). Functions of vWF were analyzed by binding assays to platelets in the presence of ristocetin or botrocetin. Parameters of binding (number of binding sites per vWF subunit, and dissociation constant Kd) were quantitatively estimated from the binding isotherms of 125I-botrocetin or glycocalicin to vWF, independently of the size of the multimers. We found that ristocetin- or botrocetin-induced binding to platelets was correlated in all cases with the size of vWF multimers. In the absence of inducer, only type IIB rvWF Met-Met540 spontaneously bound to platelets. No significant difference of binding of purified botrocetin to vWF was found b...
A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characteri... more A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characterize the functional site that supports its interaction with sulfatides. SpIII, an N-terminal homodimer generated by V-8 protease (amino acids [AA] 1 to 1365), bound to sulfatides in a dose-dependent and saturable way. SpIII also totally inhibited the binding of vWF to sulfatides and SpIII binding was completely abolished by vWF. In contrast, SpII, the complementary C-terminal homodimer (AA 1366 to 2050), did not exhibit any binding affinity for sulfatides. Four purified fragments overlapping the sequence of SpIII were also tested for their ability to interact with sulfatides. An N-terminal monomeric 34-Kd fragment (P34, AA 1 to 272) generated by plasmin, a central monomer (SpI, AA 911 to 1365) produced by digestion with V-8 protease, and a tetrameric fragment III-T2 (comprising a pair of the two sequences AA 273 to 511 and AA 674 to 728) produced by secondary digestion of SpIII with trypsi...
Arteriosclerosis and Thrombosis A Journal of Vascular Biology, 1993
We have recently shown that von Willebrand factor (vWF) binds to endothelial and fibroblastic ext... more We have recently shown that von Willebrand factor (vWF) binds to endothelial and fibroblastic extracellular matrixes (ECM) in a dose-dependent, specific, and saturable way. To localize the domain on the vWF subunit responsible for this interaction, purified proteolytic fragments of vWF were compared for their ability to inhibit 125I-vWF binding to ECM. A tryptic dimeric fragment of 116 kD (T116), extending from amino acid (aa) residues 449 to 728, produced a significant inhibition of 125I-vWF binding to the ECM. In contrast, P34 (aa 1-272), SpI (aa 911-1,365), and SpII (aa 1,366-2,050) had no significant effect on 125I-vWF binding to the ECM. Using an immunofluorescence technique, we identified type VI collagen and heparan sulfate in the endothelial ECM. 125I-vWF was found to bind specifically to purified type VI collagen. Unlabeled vWF and SpIII were able to completely inhibit 125I-vWF binding to type VI collagen. T116 and SpI appeared as competitors of this interaction, whereas P3...
The structural and functional properties of plasma and platelet vWF were studied in 8 patients (5... more The structural and functional properties of plasma and platelet vWF were studied in 8 patients (5 unrelated families) with vWD demonstrating a mutation at position 611 (R611C or R611H). Following reduction, electrophoresis and immunoblotting with a polyclonal anti-reduced vWF antibody, abnormal proteolysis of vWF was demonstrated in plasma and to a lesser extent in platelets from all patients, leading to the formation of a unique 209 kDa fragment undetectable in control as well as in type 2A, 2B or 2N vWF. Immunoblotting with MoAbs to reduced vWF showed that the C-terminal end of the 209 kDa fragment was located beyond residue 1744 of the subunit and that its N-terminus was between residues 523 and 1114. Multimeric analysis of patients vWF showed an abnormal pattern in both plasma and platelets, with a moderate decrease of the HMW multimers together with a significant increase of the lowest MW forms. The specific sensitivity of vWF R611C and vWF R611H to proteolysis was further evid...
The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop form... more The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop formed by the intra-chain disulfide bond linking Cys 509 to Cys 695. In order to further investigate the role of the conformation of this region, we have expressed in COS-7 cells three mutated full-length recombinant vWFs (rvWFs) in which the substitutions Cys509Gly, Cys509Arg or Cys695Gly have been introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. SDS-agarose gel electrophoresis demonstrated an impaired multimerization of the mutants with undetectable high molecular weight multimers and a decrease of the relative amounts of the intermediate sized multimers. Binding analysis showed that rvWFC509G and rvWFC509R did not interact with botrocetin but spontaneously interacted with GPIb; the latter binding remained unchanged in the presence of ristocetin. This indicates that the substitution of Cys509 by Gly or Arg creates a conformation of vWF that increases its binding to GPIb. In contrast, rvWFC695G whi...
The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop form... more The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop formed by the intra-chain disulfide bond linking Cys 509 to Cys 695. In order to further investigate the role of the conformation of this region, we have expressed in COS-7 cells three mutated full-length recombinant vWFs (rvWFs) in which the substitutions Cys509Gly, Cys509Arg or Cys695Gly have been introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. SDS-agarose gel electrophoresis demonstrated an impaired multimerization of the mutants with undetectable high molecular weight multimers and a decrease of the relative amounts of the intermediate sized multimers. Binding analysis showed that rvWFC509G and rvWFC509R did not interact with botrocetin but spontaneously interacted with GPIb; the latter binding remained unchanged in the presence of ristocetin. This indicates that the substitution of Cys509 by Gly or Arg creates a conformation of vWF that increases its binding to GPIb. In contrast, rvWFC695G whi...
The treatment or prevention of bleeding in patients with hemophilia A relies on replacement thera... more The treatment or prevention of bleeding in patients with hemophilia A relies on replacement therapy with different factor VIII (FVIII)-containing products or on the use of by-passing agents, i.e., activated prothrombin complex concentrates or recombinant activated factor VII. Emerging approaches include the use of bispecific anti-factor IXa/factor X antibodies, anti-tissue factor pathway inhibitor antibodies, interfering RNA to antithrombin, and activated protein C-specific serpins or gene therapy. The latter strategies are, however, hampered by the short clinical experience and potential adverse effects including the absence of tight temporal and spatial control of coagulation and the risk of uncontrolled insertional mutagenesis. Systemic delivery of mRNA allows endogenous production of the corresponding encoded protein. Thus, injection of erythropoietin-encoding mRNA in a lipid nanoparticle formulation resulted in increased erythropoiesis in mice and macaques. Here, we demonstrate...
A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characteri... more A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characterize the functional site that supports its interaction with sulfatides. SpIII, an N-terminal homodimer generated by V-8 protease (amino acids [AA] 1 to 1365), bound to sulfatides in a dose-dependent and saturable way. SpIII also totally inhibited the binding of vWF to sulfatides and SpIII binding was completely abolished by vWF. In contrast, SpII, the complementary C-terminal homodimer (AA 1366 to 2050), did not exhibit any binding affinity for sulfatides. Four purified fragments overlapping the sequence of SpIII were also tested for their ability to interact with sulfatides. An N-terminal monomeric 34-Kd fragment (P34, AA 1 to 272) generated by plasmin, a central monomer (SpI, AA 911 to 1365) produced by digestion with V-8 protease, and a tetrameric fragment III-T2 (comprising a pair of the two sequences AA 273 to 511 and AA 674 to 728) produced by secondary digestion of SpIII with trypsi...
von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a promising target for developing antithrombotic drugs. The absenc... more von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a promising target for developing antithrombotic drugs. The absence of accessible animal models impedes the study of specific human VWF (huVWF) targeting molecules in thrombosis. huVWF is not functional in the mouse because of a lack of interaction between huVWF and murine glycoprotein Ib. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we have replaced single or multiple amino acids in huVWF with their murine counterparts to eliminate species incompatibility. Using hydrodynamic injection, we have expressed the different chimeric VWF constructs into VWF−/− mice. Only huVWF with a complete murine A1 domain insertion was able to correct bleeding in vivo and form occlusive thrombi in mesenteric vessels after FeCl3 treatment. Using this model, we tested the antithrombotic effect of monoclonal antibodies against huVWF, blocking its interaction with collagens (mAbs 203 and 505) or with glycoprotein IIbIIIa (mAb 9). The 3 mAbs inhibited the thrombotic process in arterioles ...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
Several therapeutic self-proteins elicit immune responses when administered to patients. Such adv... more Several therapeutic self-proteins elicit immune responses when administered to patients. Such adverse immune responses reduce drug efficacy. To induce an immune response, a protein must interact with different immune cells, including antigen-presenting cells, T cells, and B cells. Each cell type recognizes distinct immunogenic patterns on antigens. Mannose-terminating glycans have been identified as pathogen-associated molecular patterns that are essential for internalization of microbes by antigen-presenting cells, leading to presentation. Here, we have investigated the importance of exposed mannosylation on an immunogenic therapeutic self-protein, procoagulant human factor VIII (FVIII). Administration of therapeutic FVIII to hemophilia A patients induces inhibitory anti-FVIII antibodies in up to 30% of the cases. We demonstrate that entry of FVIII into human dendritic cells (DC) leading to T cell activation, is mediated by mannose-terminating glycans on FVIII. Further, we identifi...
Alloimmune responses to intravenously administered protein therapeutics are the most common cause... more Alloimmune responses to intravenously administered protein therapeutics are the most common cause of failure of replacement therapy in patients with defective levels of endogenous proteins. Such a situation is encountered in some patients with hemophilia A, who develop inhibitory anti-factor (F)VIII alloantibodies after administration of FVIII to treat hemorrhages. The nature of the secondary lymphoid organs involved in the initiation of immune responses to human therapeutic has not been studied. We therefore investigated this in the case of FVIII, a self-derived exogenous protein therapeutic. The distribution of intravenously administered FVIII was followed after FVIII-deficient mice were injected with radiolabeled FVIII and using immunohistochemistry. The role of the spleen and antigen-presenting cells (APC) in the onset of the anti-FVIII immune response was analyzed upon splenectomy or treatment of the mice with APC-depleting compounds. FVIII preferentially accumulated in the spleen at the level of metallophilic macrophages in the marginal zone (MZ). Surgical removal of the spleen or selective in vivo depletion of macrophages and CD11c-positive CD8 alpha-negative dendritic cells resulted in a drastic reduction in anti-FVIII immune responses. Using FVIII-deficient mice as a model for patients with hemophilia A, and human pro-coagulant FVIII as a model for immunogenic self-derived protein therapeutics, our results highlight the importance of the spleen and MZ APCs in the initiation of immune responses to protein therapeutics. Identification of the receptors implicated in retention of protein therapeutics in the MZ may pave the way towards novel strategies aimed at reducing their immunogenicity.
SummaryAurin tricarboxylic acid (ATA) is known to inhibit ristocetin-induced platelet agglutinati... more SummaryAurin tricarboxylic acid (ATA) is known to inhibit ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination but not arachidonic acid-, epinephrine- or ADP-induced aggregation. Its capacity to abolish human von Willebrand factor (vWF)-platelet interactions was further investigated by measurement of platelet adhesion to collagen, platelet agglutination tests and binding studies. In flowing blood using parallel-plate perfusion chambers and human collagen, ATA inhibited platelet adhesion to completion in a dose-dependent manner only at the highest shear rate tested (2,600 s–1). It was without effect at 100 and 650 s–1. ATA completely abolished vWF-dependent platelet agglutination induced by ristocetin, botrocetin and asialo-vWF, respectively. 125I-vWF binding to ristocetin- and botrocetin-treated platelets, to heparin and to sulfatides as well as 125I-botrocetin binding to vWF was competitively inhibited by ATA. By contrast, binding of 125I-vWF to collagen was not affected. To further localize ...
Type IIA and IIB von Willebrand disease (vWD) result from qualitative abnormalities of von Willeb... more Type IIA and IIB von Willebrand disease (vWD) result from qualitative abnormalities of von Willebrand factor (vWF) characterized by an absence in plasma of high molecular weight vWF multimers and an abnormal reactivity of vWF towards platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ib, which is decreased in type IIA and increased in type IIB. In this report, we describe the case of a patient having a IIA vWD phenotype associated with an intermittent thrombocytopenia atypical in this subtype but observed in type IIB vWD. The patient plasma vWF showed an absence of high molecular weight and intermediate multimers and had a decreased binding capacity to GPIb. The affinity of botrocetin was normal for plasma vWF from the propositus. Analysis of the propositus vWF gene showed the presence of a substitution Val 551 to Phe of the mature vWF subunit. This mutation is localized within a 509-695 disulphide loop of the vWF that plays an important role in the binding to GPIb and is where most of the molecular defect...
We compared the properties of plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) from normal individuals and from... more We compared the properties of plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) from normal individuals and from two patients with type IIA (Glu875Lys) and type IIB (duplication of Met 540) von Willebrand disease (vWD) with the corresponding fully multimerized recombinant proteins. We included cryosupernatant from normal human plasma and type IIA plasma (Cys509Arg). Functions of vWF were analyzed by binding assays to platelets in the presence of ristocetin or botrocetin. Parameters of binding (number of binding sites per vWF subunit, and dissociation constant Kd) were quantitatively estimated from the binding isotherms of 125I-botrocetin or glycocalicin to vWF, independently of the size of the multimers. We found that ristocetin- or botrocetin-induced binding to platelets was correlated in all cases with the size of vWF multimers. In the absence of inducer, only type IIB rvWF Met-Met540 spontaneously bound to platelets. No significant difference of binding of purified botrocetin to vWF was found b...
A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characteri... more A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characterize the functional site that supports its interaction with sulfatides. SpIII, an N-terminal homodimer generated by V-8 protease (amino acids [AA] 1 to 1365), bound to sulfatides in a dose-dependent and saturable way. SpIII also totally inhibited the binding of vWF to sulfatides and SpIII binding was completely abolished by vWF. In contrast, SpII, the complementary C-terminal homodimer (AA 1366 to 2050), did not exhibit any binding affinity for sulfatides. Four purified fragments overlapping the sequence of SpIII were also tested for their ability to interact with sulfatides. An N-terminal monomeric 34-Kd fragment (P34, AA 1 to 272) generated by plasmin, a central monomer (SpI, AA 911 to 1365) produced by digestion with V-8 protease, and a tetrameric fragment III-T2 (comprising a pair of the two sequences AA 273 to 511 and AA 674 to 728) produced by secondary digestion of SpIII with trypsi...
Arteriosclerosis and Thrombosis A Journal of Vascular Biology, 1993
We have recently shown that von Willebrand factor (vWF) binds to endothelial and fibroblastic ext... more We have recently shown that von Willebrand factor (vWF) binds to endothelial and fibroblastic extracellular matrixes (ECM) in a dose-dependent, specific, and saturable way. To localize the domain on the vWF subunit responsible for this interaction, purified proteolytic fragments of vWF were compared for their ability to inhibit 125I-vWF binding to ECM. A tryptic dimeric fragment of 116 kD (T116), extending from amino acid (aa) residues 449 to 728, produced a significant inhibition of 125I-vWF binding to the ECM. In contrast, P34 (aa 1-272), SpI (aa 911-1,365), and SpII (aa 1,366-2,050) had no significant effect on 125I-vWF binding to the ECM. Using an immunofluorescence technique, we identified type VI collagen and heparan sulfate in the endothelial ECM. 125I-vWF was found to bind specifically to purified type VI collagen. Unlabeled vWF and SpIII were able to completely inhibit 125I-vWF binding to type VI collagen. T116 and SpI appeared as competitors of this interaction, whereas P3...
The structural and functional properties of plasma and platelet vWF were studied in 8 patients (5... more The structural and functional properties of plasma and platelet vWF were studied in 8 patients (5 unrelated families) with vWD demonstrating a mutation at position 611 (R611C or R611H). Following reduction, electrophoresis and immunoblotting with a polyclonal anti-reduced vWF antibody, abnormal proteolysis of vWF was demonstrated in plasma and to a lesser extent in platelets from all patients, leading to the formation of a unique 209 kDa fragment undetectable in control as well as in type 2A, 2B or 2N vWF. Immunoblotting with MoAbs to reduced vWF showed that the C-terminal end of the 209 kDa fragment was located beyond residue 1744 of the subunit and that its N-terminus was between residues 523 and 1114. Multimeric analysis of patients vWF showed an abnormal pattern in both plasma and platelets, with a moderate decrease of the HMW multimers together with a significant increase of the lowest MW forms. The specific sensitivity of vWF R611C and vWF R611H to proteolysis was further evid...
The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop form... more The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop formed by the intra-chain disulfide bond linking Cys 509 to Cys 695. In order to further investigate the role of the conformation of this region, we have expressed in COS-7 cells three mutated full-length recombinant vWFs (rvWFs) in which the substitutions Cys509Gly, Cys509Arg or Cys695Gly have been introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. SDS-agarose gel electrophoresis demonstrated an impaired multimerization of the mutants with undetectable high molecular weight multimers and a decrease of the relative amounts of the intermediate sized multimers. Binding analysis showed that rvWFC509G and rvWFC509R did not interact with botrocetin but spontaneously interacted with GPIb; the latter binding remained unchanged in the presence of ristocetin. This indicates that the substitution of Cys509 by Gly or Arg creates a conformation of vWF that increases its binding to GPIb. In contrast, rvWFC695G whi...
The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop form... more The interacting domain of vWF with platelet GPIb has been shown to overlap the large A1 loop formed by the intra-chain disulfide bond linking Cys 509 to Cys 695. In order to further investigate the role of the conformation of this region, we have expressed in COS-7 cells three mutated full-length recombinant vWFs (rvWFs) in which the substitutions Cys509Gly, Cys509Arg or Cys695Gly have been introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. SDS-agarose gel electrophoresis demonstrated an impaired multimerization of the mutants with undetectable high molecular weight multimers and a decrease of the relative amounts of the intermediate sized multimers. Binding analysis showed that rvWFC509G and rvWFC509R did not interact with botrocetin but spontaneously interacted with GPIb; the latter binding remained unchanged in the presence of ristocetin. This indicates that the substitution of Cys509 by Gly or Arg creates a conformation of vWF that increases its binding to GPIb. In contrast, rvWFC695G whi...
The treatment or prevention of bleeding in patients with hemophilia A relies on replacement thera... more The treatment or prevention of bleeding in patients with hemophilia A relies on replacement therapy with different factor VIII (FVIII)-containing products or on the use of by-passing agents, i.e., activated prothrombin complex concentrates or recombinant activated factor VII. Emerging approaches include the use of bispecific anti-factor IXa/factor X antibodies, anti-tissue factor pathway inhibitor antibodies, interfering RNA to antithrombin, and activated protein C-specific serpins or gene therapy. The latter strategies are, however, hampered by the short clinical experience and potential adverse effects including the absence of tight temporal and spatial control of coagulation and the risk of uncontrolled insertional mutagenesis. Systemic delivery of mRNA allows endogenous production of the corresponding encoded protein. Thus, injection of erythropoietin-encoding mRNA in a lipid nanoparticle formulation resulted in increased erythropoiesis in mice and macaques. Here, we demonstrate...
A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characteri... more A series of proteolytic fragments of human von Willebrand Factor (vWF) was purified to characterize the functional site that supports its interaction with sulfatides. SpIII, an N-terminal homodimer generated by V-8 protease (amino acids [AA] 1 to 1365), bound to sulfatides in a dose-dependent and saturable way. SpIII also totally inhibited the binding of vWF to sulfatides and SpIII binding was completely abolished by vWF. In contrast, SpII, the complementary C-terminal homodimer (AA 1366 to 2050), did not exhibit any binding affinity for sulfatides. Four purified fragments overlapping the sequence of SpIII were also tested for their ability to interact with sulfatides. An N-terminal monomeric 34-Kd fragment (P34, AA 1 to 272) generated by plasmin, a central monomer (SpI, AA 911 to 1365) produced by digestion with V-8 protease, and a tetrameric fragment III-T2 (comprising a pair of the two sequences AA 273 to 511 and AA 674 to 728) produced by secondary digestion of SpIII with trypsi...
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