Abstract

BackgroundRecombinant factor VIII (FVIII), used for haemophilia A therapy, is one of the most challenging among the therapeutic proteins produced in heterologous expression systems. Deletion variant of FVIII, in which the entire domain B is replaced by a short linker peptide, was approved for medical use. Efficacy and safety of this FVIII deletion variant are similar to full-length FVIII preparations while the level of production in CHO cells is substantially higher.Typical levels of productivity for CHO cell lines producing deletion variant FVIII-BDD SQ, described elsewhere, are 0.5–2 IU/ml, corresponding to the concentration of FVIII of about 0.2 μg/ml. Using standard vectors based on the cytomegalovirus promoter (CMV) and the dihydrofolate reductase cDNA we have previously obtained the cell line secreting 0.5 IU/ml of FVIII-BDD, which roughly corresponds to the previously published data.ResultsAn expression system based on CHO genomic sequences including CHO-EEF1A promoter and Epstein-Barr virus terminal repeat fragment allowed us to achieve 80-fold increase in the production level as compared with the conventional expression system based on the CMV promoter.Immediately after the primary selection FVIII -producing cells secreted 5–10 IU/ml of FVIII-BDD, and after multi-stage methotrexate-driven amplification a stable clonal line 11A4H was selected, secreting 39 IU/ml of FVIII-BDD in the simple batch culturing conditions, which considerably exceeds known indicators for industrial producers of this protein. In contrast to other FVIII-BDD producing lines 11A4H accumulates low proportion of the secreted FVIII on the membrane. Its productivity may be further increased approximately two-fold by adding sodium butyrate and butylated hydroxyanisol to the culture medium.A five-stage purification process for the factor VIII was employed. It allowed isolation of the intact FVIII-BDD as was confirmed by mass spectrometry. Purified FVIII-BDD has a specific activity of 11,000 IU/mg, similar to known recombinant FVIII drugs.ConclusionsThe recombinant FVIII-BDD was produced in CHO cells without addition of any animal-derived materials, purified and characterized. Novel genetic constructions for the expression of heterologous proteins combined with optimized cultivation method allowed to obtain the secretion level of biologically active recombinant FVIII increased by almost ten times as compared with the previously published analogues.

Highlights

  • Recombinant factor VIII (FVIII), used for haemophilia A therapy, is one of the most challenging among the therapeutic proteins produced in heterologous expression systems

  • Establishment and characterization of BDD-FVIII producing cell line The expression construct p1.1-F8-BDD [GenBank: KY682701] was obtained by ligating the FVIII-BDD SQ Open reading frame (ORF) preceded by the Kozak consensus sequence into expression vector p1.1

  • Natural FVIII UTRs were completely removed; in the resulting expression construct, FVIII ORF was entirely relocated into the context of EEF1A1 gene (Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Recombinant factor VIII (FVIII), used for haemophilia A therapy, is one of the most challenging among the therapeutic proteins produced in heterologous expression systems. Efficacy and safety of this FVIII deletion variant are similar to full-length FVIII preparations while the level of production in CHO cells is substantially higher. Typical levels of productivity for CHO cell lines producing deletion variant FVIII-BDD SQ, described elsewhere, are 0.5–2 IU/ ml, corresponding to the concentration of FVIII of about 0.2 μg/ml. Blood clotting factor VIII (FVIII) is a major nonenzymatic component of the positive amplification loop in the intrinsic coagulation pathway [1]. It is present in the bloodstream mostly in the non-covalent complex with its chaperone von Willebrand factor (vWF). The entire B-domain of the FVIII is expendable for its hemostatic function; a significant proportion of the natural FVIII in circulation lacks the Bdomain, which is removed by proteolysis [6]

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