Development of an inhibitory antibody fragment to human tissue factor using phage display technology

2009 
Tissue factor is involved in the etiology of thrombotic diseases initiating the thrombosis associated with the inflammation that occurs during infection. The prevention of blood coagulation and inflammation is of primary importance in a number of pathological situations. A single-chain variable antibody fragment of molecular weight of 26 kD that inhibits the action of human tissue factor was selected by phage display technology, purified and tested for its tissue factor inhibitory effect, purified on a protein A column, and its purity evaluated on SDS-PAGE. The effects of the antibody fragment on prothrombin times, Factor Xa production, and thrombin generation were assessed with increasing fragment concentrations, using chromogenic and fluorometric substrates. The antibody fragment dose-dependently prolonged the prothrombin time (IC50=0.5 μM) and delayed the lag phase before the thrombin generation burst and the peak thrombin concentration in the thrombin generation assay. The effect on thrombin generation was more pronounced in thrombophilic plasma than in normal plasma. Antibody-based tissue factor inhibitors therefore may provide an effective treatment for thrombotic disease without serious bleeding complications. Drug Dev Res 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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