Studies on a monoclonal antibody to human factor VIII coagulant activity, with a description of a facile two-site factor VIII coagulant antigen assay

1983 
Abstract IgG was purified from the ascites tumor fluid obtained from mice injected with a monoclonal cell line secreting antibody that inhibited VIII:C. With a modified Bethesda assay method (18 hr, 4 ° C), the titer of the purified IgG was 14,000 U/mg. In a fluid-phase IRMA for VIII:CAg utilizing the Fab fragment prepared from the monoclonal IgG, two high-titer human anti-VIII:C inhibitors (IgG fractions) showed no demonstrable competition for the monoclonal VIII:CAg binding site. Conversely, neither human antibody ( 125 I-Fab fragment) was displaced from its VIII:CAg binding site by the monoclonal IgG molecule. When the monoclonal antibody was used in a fluid-phase IRMA, slightly decreased VIII:CAg levels were found in serum. A facile one-step, two-site IRMA using Sepharose-bound human anti-VIII:C and labeled monoclonal IgG was designed. With this assay, in contrast to the finding with the fluid-phase IRMA, both the rate and apparent level of binding of VIII:CAg "sandwiched" between the two antibodies were increased approximately twofold in serum compared to the native plasma. A similar increase in rate and apparent level of binding was also found after thrombin treatment of VIII:C/vWf relative to the untreated control preparation.
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