Abstract
Commercial porcine factor VIII concentrate (Hyate:C) is effective in treatment of patients with hemophilia A who have circulating antibodies to factor VIII. The molecular forms of factor VIII in the concentrate were identified and evaluated in light of the known properties of porcine and human factor VIII. The factor VIII in the concentrate was isolated by tandem chromatography on gelatin-Sepharose and monoclonal anti-factor VIII-Sepharose. The factor VIII was 1% of the protein mass of the concentrate when calculated by either quantity of protein recovered or by radioimmunoassay. Both functional assay and Western blotting of the crude concentrate indicated that maximum coagulant function was achieved by proteolytic activation of procofactor forms of factor VIII. The factor VIII can be fractionated by cation-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) into two or three species of heterodimers depending on the lot. The specific activity of the purified porcine factor VIII was 550 U/mg using pooled porcine plasma at 1 U/mL as a standard. From this value, a factor VIII concentration in normal pig plasma of 2 micrograms/mL was calculated. This agreed well with a value of 3 micrograms/mL obtained by radioimmunoassay (RIA) of factor VIII in porcine plasma. In contrast, reported values for human factor VIII average 5800 U/mg, resulting in a calculated concentration in plasma of 0.2 microgram/mL. The finding that porcine plasma contains a significantly higher circulating mass of factor VIII than human plasma appears to explain previous difficulties in comparing porcine and human factor VIII in standard assays.