Factor VIII-von Willebrand Factor Binding Defects in Autosomal Recessive von Willebrand Disease Type Normandy and in Mild Hemophilia A

2009 ◽  
Vol 121 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 102-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Jacquemin
2009 ◽  
Vol 121 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 167-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Jacques Michiels ◽  
Huub H.D.M. van Vliet ◽  
Zwi Berneman ◽  
Wilfried Schroyens ◽  
Alain Gadisseur

Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 81 (10) ◽  
pp. 2644-2651 ◽  
Author(s):  
TC Nichols ◽  
DA Bellinger ◽  
RL Reddick ◽  
SV Smith ◽  
GG Koch ◽  
...  

We have studied the roles of von Willebrand factor (vWF) and factor VIII in arterial thrombosis in four canine phenotypes: normal (n = 6), hemophilia A (n = 11), von Willebrand disease (vWD) (n = 9), and hemophilia A/vWD (n = 1). vWF activity was determined by botrocetin- induced agglutination of fixed human platelets and vWF antigen (vWF:Ag) by Laurell electroimmunoassay and crossed immunoelectrophoresis. Plasma from normal dogs and those with hemophilia A had vWF activity, vWF:Ag, and a full range of vWF:Ag multimers on gel electrophoresis equivalent to normal canine plasma pool. Platelet cytosol contents were isolated by freezing and thawing, triton X-100 solubilization, or sonication of washed platelets with and without protease inhibitors and inhibitors of platelet activation. Washed platelets were also stimulated with calcium ionophore and MgCl2. There was no measurable vWF activity or vWF:Ag in platelet lysates or releasates in any dog regardless of phenotype. All dogs were studied using a standard arterial stenosis and injury procedure to induce arterial thrombosis. Thromboses were detected by cyclic reductions in Doppler blood flow velocity. Vessels were examined by light and scanning electron microscopy. Thrombosis developed in the arteries of normal (9 of 10) and hemophilia A dogs (16 of 16) but in none of the vWD dogs (0 of 10). Infusion of canine vWF cryoprecipitate into vWD dogs markedly shortened bleeding time but did not support thrombosis as seen in dogs with vWF in the plasma and subendothelium. Thrombosis, then, fails to occur when vWF is absent from the plasma and subendothelial compartments or present only in the plasma compartment. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that vWF in the plasma and subendothelium supports thrombosis. Neither plasma FVIII nor platelet vWF is essential for thrombosis in this model.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R Fuller ◽  
Kevin E Knockenhauer ◽  
Nina C Leksa ◽  
Robert T Peters ◽  
Joseph Batchelor

Interaction of factor VIII (FVIII) with von Willebrand factor (VWF) is mediated by the VWF DʹD3 domains and thrombin-mediated release is essential for hemostasis after vascular injury. VWF-DʹD3 mutations resulting in loss of FVIII binding are the underlying cause of von Willebrand Disease (VWD) type 2N. Furthermore, the FVIII-VWF interaction has significant implications for the development of therapeutics for bleeding disorders, particularly hemophilia A, where endogenous VWF clearance imposes a half-life ceiling on replacement FVIII therapy. To understand the structural basis of FVIII engagement by VWF, we solved the structure of BIVV001 by cryo-electron microscopy to 2.9 Å resolution. BIVV001 is a bioengineered clinical-stage FVIII molecule for the treatment of hemophilia A. In BIVV001, VWF-DʹD3 is covalently linked to an Fc domain of a B domain-deleted recombinant FVIII (rFVIII) Fc fusion protein, resulting in a stabilized rFVIII/VWF-DʹD3 complex. Our rFVIII/VWF structure resolves BIVV001 architecture and provides a detailed spatial understanding of previous biochemical and clinical observations related to FVIII-VWF engagement. Notably, the FVIII acidic a3 peptide region (FVIII-a3), established as a critical determinant of FVIII/VWF complex formation, inserts into a basic groove formed at the VWF-Dʹ/rFVIII interface. Our structure shows direct interaction of sulfated Y1680 in FVIII-a3 and VWF-R816, which, when mutated, leads to severe hemophilia A or VWD type 2N, respectively. These results provide insight on this key coagulation complex, explain the structural basis of many hemophilia A and VWD type 2N mutations, and inform studies to further elucidate how VWF dissociates rapidly from FVIII upon activation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 311-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Bilora ◽  
V. Boccioletti ◽  
E. Zanon ◽  
F. Petrobelli ◽  
A. Girolami

We hypothesized that patients with hemophilia or von Willebrand disease might be protected from atherosclerosis because of their coagulation defect. We studied 40 subjects affected by these two coagulation diseases using echocolor Doppler of the abdominal aorta and leg arteries, and compared the results with those obtained in 40 control patients who were homogenous with study patients in terms of sex, age, and risk factors for atherosclerosis. The probands presented a lower number of plaques than the 40 control subjects in the aorta and in the leg arteries. The most serious hemophilic patients had fewer plaques than controls or than patients with mild hemophilia. Both hemophilia and von Willebrand disease seem to protect against atherosclerosis.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 41-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia A. Lamont ◽  
Margaret V. Ragni

Abstract Although the extracellular association of Factor VIII (FVIII) and Von Willebrand Factor (VWF) is well established, the intracellular interaction of FVIII and VWF is not well understood. Recently, the importance of intracellular co-localization of FVIII and VWF for in vitro FVIII secretion was demonstrated in endothelial cell lines. Whether intracellular co-localization of FVIII and VWF is required for in vivo FVIII secretion, however, is not known. We previously showed that liver transplantation leads to phenotypic cure of hemophilia A, by virtue of FVIII production in the allograft liver. Because FVIII is synthesized only in the allograft liver but not in endothelial cells of transplant recipients, and VWF is synthesized in extrahepatic tissue, this is an ideal model to study whether co-localization of FVIII and VWF is required for in vivo FVIII secretion. We, therefore, studied FVIII and VWF response after desmopression (DDAVP) infusion, administered at 0.3 mcg/kg by intravenous infusion over 30 minutes, in each of two men with severe hemophilia A (FVIII:C <0.01 U/ml) who had undergone orthotopic liver transplantation for endstage liver disease six months earlier. Both men had HIV and hepatitis C co-infection and were clinically well, with mildly elevated liver function tests, and FVIII:C levels >30% following transplantation. Coagulation studies, drawn before and after DDAVP, revealed that VWF:RCoF and VWF:Ag, but not FVIII:C, increased after DDAVP administration (see Table). The prolonged aPTT and correction in a 1:1 aPTT mix confirmed the absence of an inhibitor in these subjects. The lack of FVIII response to DDAVP supports previous in vitro work, and demonstrates for the first time that intracellular co-localization of FVIII and VWF is essential for in vivo FVIII secretion. These data also suggest that extrahepatic FVIII synthesis is necessary for in vivo response of the DDAVP releasable pool of FVIII. By contrast, co-localization does not appear to be necessary for VWF secretion. Although it is not possible to exclude that a chronic, exhaustive post-transplant increase in VWF may have limited VWF response to DDAVP, it is clear that FVIII did not increase following DDAVP. These findings have important implications for the design of gene therapies for hemophilia A and Von Willebrand Disease. Subject Demographic Sample aPTT aPTT mix FVIII:C VWF:RCoF VWF:Ag 01-BW 32yoM Hem A Pre-DDAVP 44.4 sec 37.7 sec 0.50 U/ml 2.17 U/ml 2.42 U/ml HIV+/HCV+ Post-DDAVP 44.8 sec 37.4 sec 0.48 U/ml 2.91 U/ml 2.91 U/ml 02-PB 36yoM Hem A Pre-DDAVP 49.5 sec 38.0 sec 0.32 U/ml 1.61 U/ml 2.16 U/ml HIV+/HCV+ Post-DDAVP 50.8 sec 38.5 sec 0.30 U/ml 2.20 U/ml 2.50 U/ml


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 81 (10) ◽  
pp. 2644-2651 ◽  
Author(s):  
TC Nichols ◽  
DA Bellinger ◽  
RL Reddick ◽  
SV Smith ◽  
GG Koch ◽  
...  

Abstract We have studied the roles of von Willebrand factor (vWF) and factor VIII in arterial thrombosis in four canine phenotypes: normal (n = 6), hemophilia A (n = 11), von Willebrand disease (vWD) (n = 9), and hemophilia A/vWD (n = 1). vWF activity was determined by botrocetin- induced agglutination of fixed human platelets and vWF antigen (vWF:Ag) by Laurell electroimmunoassay and crossed immunoelectrophoresis. Plasma from normal dogs and those with hemophilia A had vWF activity, vWF:Ag, and a full range of vWF:Ag multimers on gel electrophoresis equivalent to normal canine plasma pool. Platelet cytosol contents were isolated by freezing and thawing, triton X-100 solubilization, or sonication of washed platelets with and without protease inhibitors and inhibitors of platelet activation. Washed platelets were also stimulated with calcium ionophore and MgCl2. There was no measurable vWF activity or vWF:Ag in platelet lysates or releasates in any dog regardless of phenotype. All dogs were studied using a standard arterial stenosis and injury procedure to induce arterial thrombosis. Thromboses were detected by cyclic reductions in Doppler blood flow velocity. Vessels were examined by light and scanning electron microscopy. Thrombosis developed in the arteries of normal (9 of 10) and hemophilia A dogs (16 of 16) but in none of the vWD dogs (0 of 10). Infusion of canine vWF cryoprecipitate into vWD dogs markedly shortened bleeding time but did not support thrombosis as seen in dogs with vWF in the plasma and subendothelium. Thrombosis, then, fails to occur when vWF is absent from the plasma and subendothelial compartments or present only in the plasma compartment. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that vWF in the plasma and subendothelium supports thrombosis. Neither plasma FVIII nor platelet vWF is essential for thrombosis in this model.


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