Recombinant factor VIIa (FVIIa) variants with increased activity offer the promise to improve the treatment of bleeding episodes in patients with inhibitor-complicated hemophilia. Here, an approach was adopted to enhance the activity of FVIIa by selectively optimizing substrate turnover at the membrane surface. Under physiological conditions, endogenous FVIIa engages its cell-localized cofactor tissue factor (TF), which stimulates activity through membrane-dependent substrate recognition and allosteric effects. To exploit these properties of TF, a covalent complex between FVIIa and the soluble ectodomain of TF (sTF) was engineered by introduction of a nonperturbing cystine bridge (FVIIa Q64C-sTF G109C) in the interface. Upon coexpression, FVIIa Q64C and sTF G109C spontaneously assembled into a covalent complex with functional properties similar to the noncovalent wild-type complex. Additional introduction of a FVIIa-M306D mutation to uncouple the sTF-mediated allosteric stimulation of FVIIa provided a final complex with FVIIa-like activity in solution, while exhibiting a two to three orders-of-magnitude increase in activity relative to FVIIa upon exposure to a procoagulant membrane. In a mouse model of hemophilia A, the complex normalized hemostasis upon vascular injury at a dose of 0.3 nmol/kg compared with 300 nmol/kg for FVIIa.
CITATION STYLE
Nielsen, A. L., Sorensen, A. B., Holmberg, H. L., Gandhi, P. S., Karlsson, J., Buchardt, J., … Østergaard, H. (2017). Engineering of a membrane-triggered activity switch in coagulation factor VIIa. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(47), 12454–12459. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1618713114
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