Recombinant factor VIII binding peptides

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6191256
  • Patent Number
    6,191,256
  • Date Filed
    Friday, November 20, 1998
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 20, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
Peptides that have domains that bind to recombinant factor VIII (rFVIII) are disclosed. A method of rFVIII binding assay using the peptides deduced from a combinatorial library in a filtration plate process is described. A method of using peptides having these available binding domains in an affinity chromatography process to purify factor VIII is also taught.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field




This invention is concerned generally with identifying protein-ligand interactions, and specifically with peptide ligands which bind rFVIII and which may be used in a method for the affinity purification of rFVIII.




2. Prior Art




Human Factor VIII, (antihemophilic factor) is a human plasma protein consisting of 2 polypeptides (light chain molecular weight of 80,000 and heavy chain molecular weight variable from 90,000 to 220,000). It is an essential cofactor in the coagulation pathway; required for the conversion of Factor X into its active form (Factor Xa). Factor VIII circulates in plasma as a non-covalent complex with von Willebrand Factor. Blood concentrations of Factor VIII below 20% of normal cause a bleeding disorder designated hemophilia A. Factor VIII blood levels less than 1% of normal result in a severe bleeding disorder, with spontaneous joint bleeding being the most common symptom. Recombinant DNA technology has allowed construction of plasmids that direct the expression of fusion products of Factor VIII protein in transfected mammalian cells. Factor VIII can be isolated from either a plasma derived source (cryoprecipitate) or from a genetically engineered recombinant source. The term Factor VIII is not meant to be a limitation but refers to a functional protein for treating bleeding disorders.




Several methods have been described for purification of Factor VIII from plasma sources (1,2,3). Several purification schemes utilize antibody affinity columns (4,5). To date, the most successful purifications of Factor VIII from plasma or from recombinant sources has been accomplished by using murine monoclonal antibodies specific to either Factor VIII or von Willibrand Factor.




Although monoclonal antibodies have been used successfully to obtain a relatively pure Factor VIII preparation, monoclonal antibodies can be present in the Factor VIII effluent because of leaching from the support matrix. This raises the possibility of antigenicity when the final preparation is introduced into animal systems, since murine monoclonal antibodies have been shown to be antigenic. A second disadvantage of the use of monoclonal antibodies is the requirement of cell culture facilities for producing the antibodies and the concomitant cost of purification and attachment onto a support matrix. Finally, the stability of the antibody binding site may not be amenable to the rigorous conditions necessary to sanitize the column.




Affinity chromatography is one of the most efficient techniques for purifying a protein from a complex mixture. With potential advantages including high stability, efficiency, selectivity, and low price, peptides have been investigated as affinity ligands in the pharmaceutical industry. A recent approach for identifying such ligands is to screen peptides from combinatorial peptide libraries (6,7,8,9).




Using the ‘divide-couple-recombine’ approach (10,11,12), millions of unique peptides of a defined length may be synthesized on resin beads. Each bead contains a unique peptide sequence. These library beads and their corresponding peptide sequences are then exposed to a target protein. Among these millions of peptide sequences, the target protein may bind to several unique bead-sequences. Those beads and their corresponding sequences must be detected, isolated, and identified. Several detection systems, including calorimetric two-step methods (7,12,13) as well as direct fluorescence detection methods (14,15,16) have been used.




Peptides disclosed in the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/595,718, incorporated herein by reference, also were found to bind Factor VIII. See also Necina et al. (23)




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




We have now discovered a group of peptides characterized by their ability to bind rFVIII. The sequences of the more preferred peptides having available rFVIII binding domains are Asn-Ala-Ile-Phe-Gln-Trp (SEQ ID NO:11), Ala-Phe-Val-Arg-Ser-Leu (SEQ ID NO:10), Gln-Arg-Leu-Ile-Gln-Phe (SEQ ID NO:12), Phe-Arg-Pro-His-Trp-Ala (SEQ ID NO:4), Arg-Pro-Arg-Trp (SEQ ID NO:8), and others of those presented in Table 1. A












TABLE 1











rFVIII Binding Peptide Sequences






Sequences discovered from screening of hexameric peptide library using








14


C-rFVIII with confirmed binding of rFVIII.












Seq ID




















1




Lys




Pro




Asn




Pro




Leu




Ala






2




Arg




Asn




Pro




Pro




Asn




Asn






3




Tyr




Val




Gln




Gly




Leu




Trp






4




Phe




Arg




Pro




His




Trp




Ala






5




Leu




Asn




Trp




Lys




Tyr




Gly






6




His




Tyr




Trp




Phe




Tyr




Lys






7




Ile




Arg




Phe




Tyr




Ser




Glu






8




Arg




Pro




Arg




Trp






9




Phe




Ala




Leu




Pro




Gly




Arg






10




Ala




Phe




Val




Arg




Ser




Leu






11




Asn




Ala




Ile




Phe




Gln




Trp






12




Gln




Arg




Leu




Ile




Gln




Phe






13




Lys




Ala




Gln




Glu




Thr




Trp






14




Glu




Pro




Arg




Val




Ile




Gly






15




Val




Tyr




Gly




Val




Gly




Gly






16




Trp




Arg




Arg




His




Arg




Tyr






17




Phe




Tyr




Arg




Phe




Trp




Asn






18




Trp




Leu




Trp




Ser




His




Asn






19




Phe




His




Phe




Gly




Leu




Gln






20




Trp




His




His




His




Arg




Gly






21




His




Phe




Gln




Ile




Phe




Gly






22




Phe




Val




Phe




Leu




Val




Arg














method of rFVIII binding assay using the peptides deduced from a combinatorial library in a filtration plate process is described. We also describe a method of using the peptides in an affinity chromatography process to purify rFVIII. The method comprises passing a rFVIII containing solution over a substrate which has bound thereupon peptides disclosed herein, and then eluting the rFVIII.




As used herein, an available rFVIII binding domain means a peptide sequence that is sterically available to bind with rFVIII in the surrounding solution and which adopts a conformation that ligates rFVIII with moderate to strong avidity under controlled conditions of pH, ionic strength, and solvent composition. The affinity of binding may be increased or decreased by altering the amino acids adjacent to the above listed sequences. The avidity may be modified further by altering the above mentioned conditions of solvent composition and temperature.




The peptides were isolated and identified using a modified version of a radiological screening technique (17,18,19). We also describe a method of rFVIII binding assay using the identified peptides in a filtration plate format, wherein the method comprises incubating a


14


C-rFVIII containing solution over a substrate that has bound thereupon peptides disclosed herein, and then washing the substrates with appropriate buffer conditions. Finally, a method of rFVIII binding assay using the identified peptides in a column format is also described, wherein the method comprises passing a rFVIII containing solution over a substrate that has bound thereupon peptides disclosed herein, and then eluting the rFVIII with appropriate buffer conditions. Ultimately, this method leads to an affinity chromatography process to purify rFVIII by adopting appropriate elution conditions.











SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS




Materials




Purified rFVIII (at 500 IU/vial and DOGENATE rFVIII Kogenate at 591 IU/vial of rFVIII in 5-10 mg/mL hSA), ultrafiltered tissue culture fluid containing expressed FVIII (UF-TCF), and tissue culture fluid containing expressed FVIII which had been contacted with a DEAE-Sepharose column resulting in a DEAE concentrate (DEAE eluate) were manufactured by the Bayer Corporation (Berkeley, Calif.). Human serum albumin (hSA) and plasma protein feed (PPF) were also from the Bayer Corporation (Clayton, N.C.). SUPERBLOCK® blocking buffer, Blocker® blot to nonfat powdered milk solution (5% w/v) and BLOCKER casein in Tris buffered saline (TBS) were from Pierce (Rockford, Ill.). Fmoc amino acids were from Novabiochem (San Diego, Calif.). Radiolabeled


14


C-formaldehyde was from NEN Life Science Products (Boston, Mass.). A-arose was from BioRad (Hercules, Calif.). All other chemicals were reagent grade or better.




General Methods




Peptides and a 6-mer combinatorial library were synthesized on TOYOPEARL AF amino 650 M (TosoHaas, Montgomeryville, Pa.) using standard Fmoc chemistry as described (7). Peptides were synthesized robotically with a Gilson AMS 422 (Middleton, Wis.). Peptide densities achieved with the above scheme were typically at 0.1 mmole/g resin. To control the peptide density, a mixture of 1:10 of Fmoc-L-Alanine to tBoc-L-Alanine was used as described (22).




Peptides were re-synthesized directly onto the TOYOPEARL AF amino 650 M resin, at a final substitution density of 0.1 mmole/g resin.




Analvtical Methods




Immunoassay on rFVIII using a sandwich capture ELISA for the light chain and activity assay using a chromogenic substrate (COATEST Factor VIII kit from diaPharma, Franklin, Ohio) were performed on a BIOMEK® automated liquid handling system from Beckman Instruments (Brea, Calif.). The monoclonal antibody for rFVIII light chain (known as C7F7), the ELISA assay standard (lot A70K019), and the control for the activity assay (lot A70A001 @ 140 IU/mL) were from the Bayer Corporation (Berkeley, Calif.). The standard for the activity assay was at 11.2 IU/mL (Bayer, Clayton, N.C.), calibrated against the MEGA 1 standard, which is a working standard used by American manufacturers for measuring factor VIII activity (21).




Peptide densities were determined by quantitative amino acid analysis performed at Commonwealth Biotechnologies, Inc., Richmond, Va., using a Hewlett Packard AMINO QUANT Chemistry system.




Discovery of Binding Peptides To rFVIII




An assay similar to the one described by Mondorf et al. (19) was used to deduce peptides that bind rFVIII. A 6-mer combinatorial peptide library was synthesized directly onto a TosoHaas chromatography resin, TOYOPEARL AF amino 650M, at a final substitution density of 0.1 mmole/g resin. The library was synthesized using Fmoc chemistry with 18 of the 20 natural amino acids (excepting cysteine and methionine).




Sequence identification utilized a radiological detection approach. Radiolabeling of rFVIII was performed at 5° C. by reductive methylation utilizing sodium cyanoborohydride and


14


C-formaldehyde as described (20). The labeling resulted in radioactivity yields ranging from 2 to 57×10


14


dpm/mole rFVIII.




Aliquots of library beads were placed in a reaction column (BioRad, Hercules, Calif.). To prevent nonspecific interactions between peptide and


14


C-rFVIII, the library beads were first incubated with a blocking solution containing SUPERBLOCK blocking buffer, BLOCKER blot to nonfat powdered milk solution (5% w/v) or VLOCKER casein in TBS, followed by PPF in equilibration buffer (20 mM imidazole, 10 mM CaCl2, 0.105 M NaCl, pH 6.9) for 1 hour each, on a rotating plate at ambient temperature. Radiolabeled


14


C-rFVIII at a final concentration of 60 nM in a mixture of PPF, blocking solution and UF-TCF or DEAE eluate was then added to the preblocked library beads and incubated for 2 hours on the rotating plate at 5° C.




After completion of blocking and binding, the beads were rinsed in the reaction column with equilibration buffer, until radioactivity count went down to background level. After rinsing, the beads were transferred to a container by adding low-melt agarose solution (1% by weight), and the slurry poured onto 8×″8″ sheets of GENBOND film (FMC, Rockland, Me.). To minimize the loss of beads, the reaction column and the transferring container were rinsed a second time with low melt agarose gel, and this gel was also plated out. The agarose gels were air-dried and exposed to photographic films (HYPERFILM βmax autoradiography film, Amersham Life Science, Arlington Heights, Ill.). After 5 days exposure at room temperature, the films were developed. The background level was extremely low. Re-exposure of the gels for additional 15 days resulted in confirmation of the signals. Careful alignment of the films and the agarose gels allowed for identification of positive beads which were isolated. From the signals, beads were excised, sonicated under heating to free the beads from agarose residues, and sequenced by Edman degradation. The sequence analysis was performed at the Texas A&M University, College Station, Tex., using a Hewlett Packard G1005A Protein Sequencer.




Table 2 lists the screening experiments performed using the above described protocol with variations in the type of blocking agent used (SUPERBLOCK blocking buffer, BLOCKER blot to nonfat powdered milk solution (5% w/v) or BLOCKER casein in TBS), concentration of PPF in the further blocking step, type of feed stream used (UF-TCF or DEAE eluate), amount of library beads used in each experiment, operating temperature, additional washes with 2 M NaCl, pH 6, pH 8, and 1 M CaCl


2


, and the number of beads selected from each experiment. A total of 62 beads were isolated from the experiments listed in Table 2. Among these, 30 were sequenced by Edman degradation, resynthesized on TOYOPEARL AF amino 650 M resin, and their capacity for binding of rFVIII studied in the confirmatory binding assays.




Twenty-two of the peptide sequences are listed in Table 1. Several consistencies are noted in these sequences. There are three types of residues found in all the sequences: 1) positively-charged residues (Arg, His, Lys); 2) aromatic residues (Tyr, Phe, Trp); and, 3) hydrophobic residues (Ile, Leu, Val, Pro).




Binding Confirmation




Confirmatory binding assays were performed in a filtration plate format using individual peptide sequences synthesized directly onto the TOYOPEARL AF amino 650 M resin, at a final substitution density of 0.1 mmole/g resin. A slurry of each individual peptide sequence was prepared using deionized water. A 100 μL volume of beads (corresponding to 5 mg) was loaded into each well of the filtration plate (MULTISCREEN Assay System, Millipore, Bedford, Mass.), in triplicate for each peptide sequence. Beads were washed with 20% ethanol and incubated overnight with equilibration buffer (20 mM imidazole, 10 mM












TABLE 2











Primary screening experiments leading to discovery of the binding






peptides to rFVIII.



















Peptide










Feed Stream




Library





N#







Blocker




(FS)




used




Comments




beads




















Exp




SUPER-




DEAE eluate,




 6 mg




T = amb




 3






18a




BLOCKER




SB,


14


C-rFVII





(for blocker)








(SB)






T = 5 C







Exp




blotto,




UF-TCF,




100 mg




(for FS)




 6






21




casein,




casein,









Exp




1:5 PPF






14


C-rFVIII




100 mg





 9






22






Exp




casein,




DEAE eluate,




100 mg





 1






23




1:10 PPF




SB,


14


C-rFVII







Exp






100 mg




T = amb




 7






24







Exp





UF-TCF,




200 mg




extremes




32






25







14


C-rFVIII





added:




not se-










2M NaCl, pH6,




quenced






Exp





DEAE eluate,




200 mg




pH8, 1M CaCl


2






 4






26







14


C-rFVIII





T = 5 C














CaCl


2


, 0.105 M NaCl, pH 6.9). A 100 μL aliquot of


14


C-rFVIII diluted in neat PPF to a final concentration of 20-30 nM was loaded into each well and incubated for 1 hour at 5° C. Filtrate (unbound


14


C-rFVIII) was collected into a microtiter plate and transferred to liquid scintillation vials for dpm counting. Beads were washed sequentially with: 100 μL of equilibration buffer for 15 minutes, 200 μL of 0.5 M CaCl


2


(in equilibration buffer), 200 μL of 1.0 M CaCl


2


(in equilibration buffer), and 200 uL of 2% by volume glacial acetic acid in water, for 1 hour each at 5° C. Scintillation counting on the unbound


14


C-rFVIII (plus equilibration buffer wash), salt and acid washes, as well as on the beads was then performed and the overall mass balance calculated.




Performance of the rFVIII Binding Peptides




Additional confirmatory binding assay and performance of the discovered binding peptides in terms of total rFVIII and activity recovery was performed in a column chromatographic format on a microbore HPLC. The resins were packed into 0.4×5 cm columns (Thomson, Springfield, Va.) and tested on the MICHROM HPLC system (Michrom BioResources, Auburn, Calif.). The elution program for the trials utilized the following method. The column was pre-equilibrated with equilibration buffer (as above). A 1 mL aliquot of 1:10 PPF followed by 1 mL of rFVIII (10,000 ng) in 1:10 PPF were injected and allowed sufficient time to flow through the column using equilibration buffer. The column was then washed with step elutions of 0.5 M and 1.0 M CaCl


2


in equilibration buffer. The column was exposed to equilibration buffer. Remaining protein was eluted with 2% by volume glacial acetic acid in water. Columns were kept at 5° C. during the chromatographic runs. For each 1 mL injection (equilibration buffer, 1:10 PPF and 10,000 ng rFVIII in 1:10 PPF), the chromatographic cycle was run for 45 minutes (injection, flow through, 0.5 M CaCl


2


, 1.0 M CaCl


2


, equilibration buffer, 2% acetic acid, equilibration buffer).




A Gilson FC204 fraction collector at the HPLC outlet collected individual eluates for further analysis. Each collection tube had 100 μL hSA added to it to stabilize the rFVIII. Fractions collected from the 2% acetic acid eluates were neutralized with 2 M Tris, pH 10.5 to bring the pH to neutrality. The fractions were analyzed for total protein by the integration of the absorbance at 280 nm, for rFVIII by immunoassay (sandwich capture ELISA), and for rFVIII activity by a chromogenic substrate assay.




Results




Tables 3 and 4 present the results from the confirmatory binding assays using the plate format. Beads presenting the appropriate peptide sequence on the surface were placed in the filtration plate wells and incubated sequentially with equilibration buffer,


14


C-rFVIII in PPF, equilibration buffer, 0.5 M CaCl


2


wash, 1.0 M CaCl


2


wash and 2% acetic acid wash. After each incubation, filtrate was collected in microtiter plates, and dpm counted on each












TABLE 3











Confirmation of binding for peptide sequences 1 to 8 and






16 to 18 using


14


C-rFVIII in the plate format binding assay.






Sequences 1 to 8 resulted in


14


C-rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M CaCl


2


wash






while sequences 16 to 18 in the 2% acetic acid wash. Binding results






from a non binder sequence IGF are included for comparison, as well as






the results from the control (


14


C-rFVIII loaded into wells without beads).






100 μL of


14


C-rFVIII at 20 nM and 3.0 × 10


15


DPM/mole were






loaded into each well containing 5 mg beads.























2%












0.5M





acetic






Seq.





CaCl2




%




acid




%




beads




%




Total






ID




Sequence




dpm




total




dpm




total




dpm




total




dpm









 1




KPNPLA




2694




85




368




12




 99




3




3162






 2




RNPPNN




2366




86




322




12




 79




3




2767






 3




YVQGLW




1502




74




379




19




140




7




2020






 4




FRPHWA




2905




78




631




17




209




6




3744






 5




LNWKYG




3519




86




430




10




143




3




4091






 6




HYWFYK




3236




83




458




12




187




5




3881






 7




IRFYSE




3184




85




415




11




165




4




3764






 8




RPRW




3543




86




377




 9




178




4




4098






16




WRRHRY




608




21




1302




45




986




34




2897






17




FYRFWN




498




17




2156




72




355




12




3009






18




WLWSHN




651




25




1752




67




205




8




2608







IGF




219




80




41




15




 14




5




 274






con-




no beads




98




86




16




14





0




 114






trol














filtrate sample. Sequences 1 to 8 (Table 3) and 9 to 15 (Table 4) resulted in high percentage


14


C-rFVIII bound and eluted in 0.5 M CaCl


2


, ranging from 48 to 95% eluted by the salt wash. Sequences 16 to 18 (Table 3) and 19 to 21 (Table 4) resulted in most of the bound rFVIII (from 45 to 72%) eluted by the 2% acetic acid wash. Finally, sequence 22 resulted in tight binding, with 65% of the bound


14


C-rFVIII still on the peptide bead after salt and acid washes. Results for a non-binding peptide sequence (IGF), as well as for the control with no beads in the inicrotiter plate wells, are also shown for comparison.












TABLE 4











Confirmation of binding for peptide sequences 9 to 15 and






19 to 22 using


14


C-rFVIII in the plate format binding assay.






Sequences 9 to 15 resulted in


14


C-rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M CaCl


2


wash






while sequences 19 to 21 in the 2% acetic acid wash. Sequence 22 is a






tight binder, not eluting the bound


14


C-rFVIII by the salt or acid washes






performed. The control (


14


C-rFVIII loaded into wells without beads) is






also presented. 100 μL of


14


C-rFVIII at 30 nM and 5.0 × 10


15








dpm/mole were loaded into each well containing 5 mg beads.























2%












0.5M





acetic






Seq.





CaCl2




%




acid




%




beads




%




Total






ID




Sequence




dpm




total




dpm




total




dpm




total




dpm









 9




FALPGR




3414




93




176




5




68




2




3658






10




AFVRSL




3491




93




188




5




85




2




3764






11




NAIFQW




1049




48




518




23




641




29




2208






12




QRLIQF




3191




90




271




8




95




3




3557






13




KAQETW




3884




95




135




3




77




2




4096






14




EPRVIG




1994




91




130




6




60




3




2184






15




VYGVGG




2162




93




115




5




53




2




2330






19




FHFGLQ




457




15




2148




72




382




13




2987






20




WHHHRG




485




12




2099




54




1300




33




3884






21




HFQIFG




722




21




2208




63




554




16




3484






22




FVFLVR




675




16




783




19




2658




65




4116






con-




no beads




98




75




 33




25





0




 131






trol














In Table 3, the


14


C-rFVIII was loaded at 20 nM (in PPF) and the radiolabeling yield was at 3.0×10


15


dpm/mole. In Table 4, the


14


C-rFVIII was loaded at 30 nM (in PPF) and the radiolabeling yield was at 5.0×10


15


dpm/mole.




Tables 5 and 6 present the results from the additional confirmatory binding assays using the column format. The chromatography method was run by injecting the samples at a flow rate of 865 μL/min (413 cm/hr). In order to provide a 10 minute residence time of sample in the column the flow was decreased to 17 μL/min (10 cm/hr) upon injection.












TABLE 5











Confirmation of binding for peptide sequences 1 to 8






and 16 to 18 in the column format binding assay.






Sequences 1 to 8 resulted in rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M






CaCl


2


wash while sequences 16 to 18 in the 2% acetic acid






wash. Binding results from a non binder sequence IGF are included






for comparison, as well as the results from the control






(rFVIII injected in the HPLC without any column attached).

























2%










Flow




%




0.5M




%




acetic




%






Seq





through




to-




CaCl2




to-




acid




to-




Total






ID




Sequence




ng




tal




ng




tal




ng




tal




ng









 1




KPNPLA




583




10




4961




88




61




1




5651






 2




RNPPNN




447




7




5745




92




31




0




6245






 3




YVQGLW




n.a.





n.a.





n.a.





n.a.






 4




FRPHWA




225




4




5510




90




160




3




6123






 5




LNWKYG




25




0




5530




97




125




2




5680






 6




HYWFYK




105




2




5658




90




160




3




6320






 7




IRFYSE




228




4




5836




94




77




1




6225






 8




RPRW




122




2




5449




97




10




0




5623






16




WRRHRY




56




2




338




9




2550




71




3615






17




FYRFWN




127




3




1622




37




2336




54




4348






18




WLWSHN




8




0




2362




56




760




18




4200







IGF




4719




95




201




4




10




0




4962






con-




no column




5110




98




80




2




10




0




5212






trol














Following the incubation, the flow was set at 865 μL/min (413 cm/hr) for the step clutions of 0.5 M CaCl


2


, 1.0 M CaCl


2


, and 2% acetic acid. Results are expressed in terms of the total mass of rFVIII in each fraction, as determined by the sandwich capture ELISA assay for the rFVIII light chain. Sequences 1 to 8 and 18 (Table 5) and 9 to 15 (Table 6) resulted in high percentage of the protein bound and eluted in 0.5 M CaCl


2


, ranging from 32 to 98% eluted by the salt wash. Sequences 16 to 17 (Table 5) and 19 to 22 (Table 6) resulted in 54 to 100% of the bound rFVIII eluted by the 2% acetic acid wash. A control using a non-binding peptide sequence (IGF) is also shown for comparison—in this case, 95% of the rFVIII loaded to the column was collected in the flow through fraction. Additional controls with no












TABLE 6











Reconfirmation of binding for peptide sequences 9 to 15






and 19 to 22 in the column format binding assay.






Sequences 9 to 15 resulted in rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M






CaCl


2


wash while sequences 19 to 21 in the 2% acetic






acid wash. Results for the control (rFVIII injected in the






HPLC without column) are also presented for comparison.

























2%










Flow




%




0.5M




%




acetic




%






Seq





through




to-




CaCl2




to-




acid




to-




Total






ID




Sequence




ng




tal




ng




tal




ng




tal




ng









 9




FALPGR




0




0




7154




97




181




2




7403






10




AFVRSL




0




0




11023




98




135




1




11272






11




NAIFQW




639




7




7481




78




1069




11




9641






12




QRLIQF




0




0




9223




96




188




2




9579






13




KAQETW




641




7




8018




90




87




1




8863






14




EPRVIG




5828




66




2850




32




75




1




8851






15




VYGVGG




3572




42




4611




55




121




1




8427






19




FHFGLQ




0




0




1075




25




2569




60




4283






20




WHHHRG




0




0




36




1




4719




95




4966






21




HFQIFG




0




0




1239




22




3284




60




5510






22




FVFLVR




0




0




4




0




4500




100




4504






con-




no column




8109




95




334




4




63




1




8564






trol














colummns connected to the HPLC system were also run for comparison. Theoretically, 10,000 ng of rFVIII (in 1:10 PPF) were expected to be loaded in each column. In Table 5, the mass balance on the total amount of rFVIII in the no column control showed only about 52% of theroetical value actually loaded in the system. In Table 6, the mass balance on the control resulted in 86% of the theoretical value loaded in the system.




Performance of the rFVIII Binding Peptides




Tables 7 and 8 list the sequences for which activity recovery was determined by a chromogenic substrate assay (COASTEST kit, diaPharma, Franklin, Ohio). Chromatographc conditions are the same as described above for the results from Tables 5 and 6. It can be












TABLE 7











Activity recovery for peptide sequences 1, 2, 5, 6 and 7.






The sequences which resulted in rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M






CaCl


2


showed high activity recovery, ranging from 86 to






96%. Activity recovery for the control (rFVIII injected through






the HPLC without column) is also shown for comparison.

























2%










Flow




%




0.5M




%




acetic




%






Seq





through




to-




CaCl2




to-




acid




to-




Total






ID




Sequence




IU




tal




IU




tal




IU




tal




IU









1




KPNPLA




0.03




0




32.8




90




0.58




2




36.5






2




RNPPNN




0.4




1




51.6




95




0.5




1




54.3






5




LNWKYG




0.0




0




36.3




96




1.2




3




37.8






6




HYWFYK




0.0




0




59.4




86




0.5




1




68.7






7




IRFYSE




0.0




0




40.6




96




0.4




1




42.5






con-




no column




54.8




96




 1.9




 3




0.0




0




56.9






trol






















TABLE 8











Activity recovery for peptide sequences 9 to 15 and 19 to 22.






The sequences which resulted in rFVIII eluted in the 0.5M






CaCl


2


showed high activity recovery, ranging from 25 to






98%. Activity recovery for the sequences that elute rFVIII in the






acid fraction is very low. Results for the control (rFVIII injected






through the HPLC without column) are also shown for comparison.

























2%










Flow




%




0.5M




%




acetic




%






Seq





through




to-




CaCl2




to-




acid




to-




Total






ID




Sequence




IU




tal




IU




tal




IU




tal




IU









 9




FALPGR




0.0




0




68.9




98




0.1




0




70.2






10




AFVRSL




0.0




0




53.1




98




0.1




0




54.3






11




NAIFQW




2.5




4




54.4




90




0.0




0




60.4






12




QRLIQF




0.0




0




45.1




97




0.08




0




46.6






13




KAQETW




0.8




2




48.3




96




0.09




0




50.3






14




EPRVIG




42.9




73




14.7




25




0.00




0




58.6






15




VYGVGG




17.3




38




27.2




60




0.08




0




45.4






19




FHFGLQ




0.5




2




9.9




51




1.4




7




19.5






20




WHHHRG




0.0




0




0.4




4




3.5




45




7.8






21




HFQIFG




0.0




0




11.4




53




4.1




19




21.2






22




FVFLVR




0.0




0




0.0




0




2.3




100




2.3






con-




no column




37.5




92




2.6




6




0.2




0




40.8






trol














observed that most of the rFVIII eluted in the salt fraction (0.5 M CaCl


2


) showed activity recovery, while for the rFVIII eluted in acid, practically no activity is recovered. Sequences 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13 resulted in high activity recoveries, ranging from 86 to 98%.




Table 9 presents a summary of the performance of the discovered peptide sequences that resulted in binding and elution of the rFVIII in the 0.5 M CaCl


2


fractions (sequences 1 to 15). Chromatographic conditions are the same as described above for the results from Tables 5 and 6. The rFVIII present in these fractions ranged from 32-98% of the total rFVIII












TABLE 9











Performance of the peptide sequences that elute rFVIII in the 0.5M CaCl


2.








Peak areas (x106) of the 0.5M CaCl


2


fractions correlated with the






percentage total rFVIII and rFVIII activity recovered. Results based on the






injection of 10,000 ng rFVIII (in 5 mg PPF) in equilibration






buffer at 5° C.



















ELISA





Activity










results





results





Peak






Seq ID




Sequence




ng




% total




IU




% total




area









1




KPNPLA




4961




88




32.8




90




7.7






2




RNPPNN




5745




92




51.6




95




5.0






3




YVQGLW




n.a.





n.a.





n.a.






4




FRPHWA




5510




90




n.a.





81.9






5




LNWKYG




5530




97




36.3




96




3.6






6




HYWFYK




5658




90




59.4




86




3.4






7




IRFYSE




5836




94




40.6




96




4.2






8




RPRW




5449




97




n.a.





18.1






9




FALPGR




7154




97




68.9




98




4.9






10




AFVRSL




11023




98




53.1




98




22.8






11




NAIFQW




7481




78




54.4




90




0.4






12




QRLIQF




9223




96




45.1




97




13.7






13




KAQETW




8018




90




48.3




96




4.4






14




EPRVIG




2850




32




14.7




25




0.0






15




VYGVGG




4611




55




27.2




60




2.0














loaded, and the activity recovery ranged from 25 to 98%. The integrated peak areas (based on absorbance at 280 nm) for the injection of 10,000 ng rFVIII (in 1:10 PPF, with a total protein of approximately 5 mg/mL) at 5° C. are also presented. All the sequences eluted enriched rFVIII in the salt fraction.




CONCLUSION




Peptides sequences with varying degrees of specificity and affinity for factor VIII were identified from the screening of a combinatorial peptide library. A number of sequences including Asn Ala Ile Phe Gln Trp (SEQ ID NO:11) showed the ability to purify factor VIII. The affinity of these peptide sequences for factor VIII may be altered by deleting, substituting, or adding amino acids to the disclosed sequences. It is expected that the binding domains of the disclosed peptide sequences may be contained within other, longer peptides and still bind to factor VIII.




The above examples are intended to illustrate the invention, and it is thought variants will occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended that the scope of the invention should be limited only by the claims below.




REFERENCES




1. Tuddenham, E. G. D., et al., “The properties of factor VIII coagulant activity prepared by immunoadsorbent chromatography”, J Lab Clin Med, 93: 40 (1979).




2. Austen, D. E. G., “The chromatographic separation of factor VIII on arninohexyl sepharose”, Brit J Heamotol, 43: 669 (1979).




3. Zimmerman, et al., “Ultrapurification of factor VIII using monoclonal antibodies”, U.S. Pat. No. 4,361,509 (Nov. 30, 1982).




4. Wood, W. I., et al., Expression of active human factor VIII from recombinant DNA clones”, Nature, 312: 330-337 (1984).




5. Rotblat, F., et al., “Purification of human factor VIII:C and its characterization by western blotting using monoclonal antibodies”, Biochemistry, 24: 4294 (1985).




6. Baumbach, G. A., et al., “Protein Purification Using Affinity Ligands from Peptide Libraries”, BioPharm, May 1992, 24-35.




7. Buettner, J. A., et al., “Chemically derived peptide libaries: A new resin and methodology for lead identification”, Int J Peptide Protein Res, 47: 70-83 (1996).




8. Huang, P. Y., et al., “Affinity Purification of Proteins Using Ligands Derived from Peptide Libraries”, Biotechnol & Bioeng, 47: 288-297 (1995).




9. Huang, P. Y., et al., “Affinity Purification of von Willebrand Factor Using Ligands Derived from Peptide Libraries”, Bioorg & Med Chem, 4: 699-708 (1996).




10. Furka, A., et al., “General method for rapid synthesis of multicomponent peptide mixtures”, Int J Peptide Protein Res, 37: 487-493 (1992).




11. Lam, K. S., et al., “A new type of synthetic peptide library for identifying ligand-binding activity”, Nature, 354: 82-84 (1991).




12. Houghten, R. A., et al., “Generation and use of synthetic peptide combinatorial libraries for basic research and drug discovery”, Nature, 354: 84-86 (1991).




13. Lam, K. S., et al., “Application of a dual color detection scheme in the screening of a random combinatorial peptide library”, J Immunol Meth, 180: 219-223 (1995).




14. Meldal, M., et al., “Portion-mixing peptide libraries of quenched fluorogenic substrates for complete subsite mapping of endoprotease specificity”, Proc Nat Acad Sci USA, 91: 3314-3318 (1994).




15. Meldal, M., et al., “Direct visualization of enzyme inhibitors using a portion mixing inhibitor library containing a quenched fluorogenic peptide substrate. Part 1. Inhibitors for subtilisin Carlsberg”, J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 1: 1591-1596 (1995).




16. Needels, M. C., et al., “Generation and screening of an oligonucleotide-encoded synthetic peptide library”, Proc Nat Acad Sci USA, 90: 10700-10704 (1993).




17. Kassarjian, A., et al., “Screening of Synthetic Peptide Libraries with Radiolabeled Acceptor Molecules”, Peptide Research, 6: 129-133 (1993).




18. Turck, C. W., “Radioactive Screening of Synthetic Peptide Libraries”, Methods: A Companion to Methods in Enzymology, 6: 396-400 (1994).




19. Mondorf, K, et al., J Pept. Res. in press (1998).




20. Jentoft, N. et al., “Protein Labeling by Reductive Alkylation”, Meth Enzymol, 91: 570-579 (1983).




21. Barrowcliffe, T. W., “Recommendations for the assay of high-purity factor VIII concentrates” Thromb Haem 70: 876-877 (1993).




22. Baumbach, G. A., et al., “Peptides which bind to prothrombin and thrombin”, U.S. Pat. No. 5,831,003 (Nov. 3, 1998).




23. Necina, R., et al., “Peptide affinity chromatography of human clotting factor VIII: Screening of the vWF-binding domain”, J Chrom B 715: 191-201 (1998).







22




1


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





1
Lys Pro Asn Pro Leu Ala
1 5




2


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





2
Arg Asn Pro Pro Asn Asn
1 5




3


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





3
Tyr Val Gln Gly Leu Trp
1 5




4


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





4
Phe Arg Pro His Trp Ala
1 5




5


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





5
Leu Asn Trp Lys Tyr Gly
1 5




6


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





6
His Tyr Trp Phe Tyr Lys
1 5




7


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





7
Ile Arg Phe Tyr Ser Glu
1 5




8


4


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





8
Arg Pro Arg Trp
1




9


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





9
Phe Ala Leu Pro Gly Arg
1 5




10


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





10
Ala Phe Val Arg Ser Leu
1 5




11


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





11
Asn Ala Ile Phe Gln Trp
1 5




12


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





12
Gln Arg Leu Ile Gln Phe
1 5




13


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





13
Lys Ala Gln Glu Thr Trp
1 5




14


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





14
Glu Pro Arg Val Ile Gly
1 5




15


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





15
Val Tyr Gly Val Gly Gly
1 5




16


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





16
Trp Arg Arg His Arg Tyr
1 5




17


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





17
Phe Tyr Arg Phe Trp Asn
1 5




18


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





18
Trp Leu Trp Ser His Asn
1 5




19


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





19
Phe His Phe Gly Leu Gln
1 5




20


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





20
Trp His His His Arg Gly
1 5




21


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





21
His Phe Gln Ile Phe Gly
1 5




22


6


PRT


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceSynthetic





22
Phe Val Phe Leu Val Arg
1 5






Claims
  • 1. A composition comprising a peptide having an available rFVIII binding domain, wherein the binding domain is selected from the group consisting of Arg Asn Pro Pro Asn Asn; Tyr Val Gln Gly Leu Trp; Phe Arg Pro His Trp Ala; His Tyr Trp Phe Tyr Lys; Ile Arg Phe Tyr Ser Glu; Asn Ala Ile Phe Gln Trp; Gln Arg Leu Ile Gln Phe; Lys Ala Gln Glu Thr Trp; and Glu Pro Arg Val Ile Gly (SEQ ID NOS: 2-4, 6, 7, and 11-14, respectively).
  • 2. The composition of claim 1, wherein the peptide is immobilized upon a water-insoluble support.
  • 3. The composition of claim 2, wherein the support is a chromatography medium.
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number Name Date Kind
4518584 Mark et al. May 1985
4913902 Kilpatrick et al. Apr 1990
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
WO 9300365 Jan 1993 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (7)
Entry
Necina et al., Journal of Chromatography B, vol. 715, pp. 191-201, 1998.
Mazo et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, vol. 87, pp. 2112-2116, Mar. 1990.
Kunst et al., Nature, vol. 390, pp. 249-256, Nov. 20, 1997.
Fleischmann et al., Science, vol. 269, pp. 496-512, Jul. 28, 1995.
Loeber et al., Biochem. J., vol. 304, pp. 687-692, 1994.
Klenk et al., Nature, vol. 390, pp. 364-370, Nov. 27, 1997.
Necina et al., Journal of Chromatography B, vol. 715, pp. 191-201, 1998.