Abstract
The interference of antibodies to factor VIII coagulant protein (VIII:C) of 9 nonhemophilic patients with the binding to factor VIII coagulant antigen (VIII:CAg) of a reference hemophilic 125I-Fab' reagent, used in a liquid phase VIII:CAg assay, was studied. The binding competition was estimated from immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) dose-response slope of VIII:CAg present in patient plasma, interference of antibodies with the 125I-Fab' binding to VIII:CAg in normal plasma, and the displacement of antibody from the complexes with VIII:CAg by the 125I Fab'. Antibody populations from three patients were studied in detail; in the VIII:CAg assay, two of them interfered with the 125I- Fab' binding, and one did not (patient 1). The formation of stable complexes between antibodies of each patient and VIII:CAg was demonstrated by protein-A-Sepharose adsorption. The 125I-Fab' binding to VIII:CAg-anti-VIII:CAg IgG complexes indicated that patient 1 antibodies and the 125I-Fab' recognized different antigenic determinants, whereas the other two patient antibodies and 125I-Fab' recognized closely related or identical VIII:CAg determinants. These results demonstrate an apparently selective recognition of at least two distinct VIII:CAg determinants by naturally occurring antibodies, suggesting a possibility of a wider use of these antibodies in studies of the structure and function of factor VIII.
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