4.6 Article

Novel factor VIII variants with a modified furin cleavage site improve the efficacy of gene therapy for hemophilia A

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages 110-121

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jth.13543

Keywords

factor VIII; furin; genetic therapy; hemophilia A; dependovirus

Funding

  1. Advancing Science through Pfizer - Investigator Research Exchange (ASPIRE) Hemophilia Research Grant Award
  2. Eastern Pennsylvania Chapter of the National Hemophilia Foundation
  3. National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01 HL126850]
  4. Multidisciplinary Molecular Interaction Core (MMIC) from the National Institutes of Health [1S10RR026935]
  5. University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL [R01 HL115187-01A1]

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Background The major challenge for developing gene-based therapies for hemophilia A is that human factor VIII (hFVIII) has intrinsic properties that result in inefficient biosynthesis. During intracellular processing, hFVIII is predominantly cleaved at a paired basic amino acid cleaving enzyme (PACE) or furin cleavage site to yield a heterodimer that is the major form of secreted protein. Previous studies with B-domain-deleted (BDD) canine FVIII and hFVIII-R1645H, both differing from hFVIII by a single amino acid at this site, suggested that these proteins are secreted mainly in a single polypeptide chain (SC) form and exhibit enhanced function. Objective We hypothesized that deletion(s) of the furin site modulates FVIII biology and may enhance its function. Methods A series of recombinant hFVIII-furin deletion variants were introduced into hFVIII-BDD [1645, 1645-46(2), 1645-47(3), 1645-48(4), or 1648] and characterized. ResultsIn vitro, recombinant purified 3 and 4 were primarily SC and, interestingly, had 2-fold higher procoagulant activity compared with FVIII-BDD. In vivo, the variants also have improved hemostatic function. After adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector delivery, the expression of these variants is 2-4-fold higher than hFVIII-BDD. Protein challenges of each variant in mice tolerant to hFVIII-BDD showed no anti-FVIII immune response. Conclusions These data suggest that the furin deletion hFVIII variants are superior to hFVIII-BDD without increased immunogenicity. In the setting of gene-based therapeutics, these novel variants provide a unique strategy to increase FVIII expression, thus lowering the vector dose, a critical factor for hemophilia A gene therapy.

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