4.6 Article

The C1 and C2 domains of blood coagulation factor VIII mediate its endocytosis by dendritic cells

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 102, Issue 2, Pages 271-281

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2016.148502

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Funding

  1. Institut national de la sante et de la recherche medicale (INSERM)
  2. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
  3. Universite Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC) Paris 6 (France)
  4. Grifols (Investigator-Sponsored Research Program, Barcelona, Spain)
  5. Ministere de lenseignement superieur et de la recherche (France)

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The development of inhibitory antibodies to therapeutic factor VIII is the major complication of replacement therapy in patients with hemophilia A. The first step in the initiation of the anti-factor VIII immune response is factor VIII interaction with receptor( s) on antigenpresenting cells, followed by endocytosis and presentation to naive CD4 T cells. Recent studies indicate a role for the C1 domain in factor VIII uptake. We investigated whether charged residues in the C2 domain participate in immunogenic factor VIII uptake. Co-incubation of factor VIII with BO2C11, a monoclonal C2-specific immunoglobulin G, reduced factor VIII endocytosis by dendritic cells and presentation to CD4 T cells, and diminished factor VIII immunogenicity in factor VIII-deficient mice. The mutation of basic residues within the BO2C11 epitope of C2 replicated reduced in vitro immunogenic uptake, but failed to prevent factor VIII immunogenicity in mice. BO2C 11 prevents factor VIII binding to von Willebrand factor, thus potentially biasing factor VIII immunogenicity by perturbing its half-life. Interestingly, a factor VIIIY1680C cmutant, that does not bind von Willebrand factor, demonstrated unaltered endocytosis by dendritic cells as well as immunogenicity in factor VIII-deficient mice. Co-incubation of factor VIIIY1680C with BO2C11, however, resulted in decreased factor VIII immunogenicity in vivo. In addition, a previously described triple C1 mutant showed decreased uptake in vitro, and reduced immunogenicity in vivo, but only in the absence of endogenous von Willebrand factor. Taken together, the results indicate that residues in the C1 and/ or C2 domains of factor VIII are implicated in immunogenic factor VIII uptake, at least in vitro. Conversely, in vivo, the binding to endogenous von Willebrand factor masks the reducing effect of mutations in the C domains on factor VIII immunogenicity.

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