CA2107100A1 - Therapeutic fragments of von willebrand factor - Google Patents

Therapeutic fragments of von willebrand factor

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Publication number
CA2107100A1
CA2107100A1 CA 2107100 CA2107100A CA2107100A1 CA 2107100 A1 CA2107100 A1 CA 2107100A1 CA 2107100 CA2107100 CA 2107100 CA 2107100 A CA2107100 A CA 2107100A CA 2107100 A1 CA2107100 A1 CA 2107100A1
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Prior art keywords
vwf
polypeptide
fragment
subunit
amino acid
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French (fr)
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Zaverio M. Ruggeri
Jerry L. Ware
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Scripps Research Institute
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/745Blood coagulation or fibrinolysis factors
    • C07K14/755Factors VIII, e.g. factor VIII C (AHF), factor VIII Ag (VWF)
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K16/00Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies
    • C07K16/18Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans
    • C07K16/36Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans against blood coagulation factors
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K38/00Medicinal preparations containing peptides

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Molecular Biology (AREA)
  • Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
  • Hematology (AREA)
  • Biochemistry (AREA)
  • Biophysics (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Genetics & Genomics (AREA)
  • Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids (AREA)
  • Toxicology (AREA)
  • Gastroenterology & Hepatology (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Immunology (AREA)
  • Medicines That Contain Protein Lipid Enzymes And Other Medicines (AREA)
  • Peptides Or Proteins (AREA)

Abstract

A polypeptide patterned on a fragment of wild type mature von Willebrand factor (vWF) subunit having one ore more binding sites of predetermined affinity for one or more of the ligands selected from the group consisting of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha., platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, or coagulation factor VIII, said polypeptide having a modified amino acid sequence relative to that of said fragment and an increased binding affinity, relative to said predetermined affinity, for one or more of said ligands, including also such a polypeptide prepared by mutagenesis of a DNA sequence and patterned on wild type mature vWF subunit, and also a polypeptide in purified form patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises the wild type amino acid sequence of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, and including also purified DNA
sequences encoding such polypeptides, expression plasmids and viral expression vectors containing the DNA sequences, and therapeutic compositions comprising such polypeptides effective in the treatment of thrombosis, and methods for the use thereof, and also preparation of such polypeptides by mutagenesis of an encoding DNA
sequence or covalent modification of wild type vWF.

Description

WO 92il719' ~ PCr/l,'S92tO~7:' . .

THER~PEUTIC FRAGMENTS OF VON WILLEBRAND FACTOR
Cross-Reference to Related Ap~lications This is a continuation-in-part of application Serial No.
07/613,004, filed November 13, 1990, which is a continuation-in-part of Serial No. 07/600,183, filed October 17, 1990, which is a continuation-in-part of Serial No. 07/519,606, filed May 7, 1990, which is a continuation~in-part of Serial No. 07/270,488, filed November 4, 1988, now abandoned, which is a continuation of Serial No. 869,188, filed May 30, 1986, now abandoned. This is also a continuation-in-part of aforementioned Serial No. 07/600,183, filed October 17, 1990.

Field o~ the Invention This invention relates to polypeptides which are useful in the treatment of vascular clisorders such as thrombosis.
This invention relates also to polypeptides which are useful in the treatment of hemorrhagic diseases, such as von Willebrand disease (vWD). This invention further relates to the production by recombinant DNA-directed methods o*
pharmacologically useful quantities of the po~ypeptides of the present invention.
The term "hemostasis" refers to those processes which comprise khe defense mechanisms of the body against loss of circulating blood caused by vascular injury. Processes which , . , .
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... .. . .
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W092/1719~ ?~ ~ 5) rl 1 ~ PCT/US92/0247~

are normal as a physiologic response to vascular injury may lead in pathologic circumstances, such as in a patient afflicted with atherosclerotic vascular disease or chronic congestive heart failure, to the formation of undesired thrombi (clots) with resultant vascular occlusion.
Impairment of blood flow to organs under such circumstances may lead to severe pathologic states, including myocardial infarction, a leading cause of mortality in developed countries.
The restriction or termination of the flow of blood within the circulatory system in response to a wound or as a result of a vascular disease state involves a complex series of reactions which can be divided into two processes, primary and secondary hemostasis. Primary hemostasis refers to the process of platelet plug or soft clot formation. The platelets are non-nucleated discoid structures approximately
2-5 microns in diameter derived from megakaryocytic cells.
Effective primary hemostasis is accomplished by platelet adhesion, the interaction of platelets with the surface of damaged vascular endothelium on which are exposed underlying collagen fibers and/or other adhesive macromolecules such as proteoylycans and glycosaminoglycans to which platelets bind.
Secondary hemostasis involves the reinforcement or crosslinking of the soft platelet clot. This secondary process is initiated by proteins circulating in the plasma (coagulation factors) which are activated during primary hemostasis, either in response to a wound or a vascular disease state. The activation of these factors results ultimately in the production of a polymeric matrix of the protein fibrinogen (then called fibrin) which reinforces the soft clot.
Therapeutic drugs for controlling thrombosis have been classified according to the stage of hemostasis which is affected by the administration thereof. Such prior art ~ompositions are typically classified as anticoagulants, thrombolytics and platelet inhibitors.
The anticoagulant therapeutics typically represent a class of drugs which intervene in secondary hemostasis.
Anticoagulants typically have no direct effect on an WO92/17192 ~ S~2/02 established thrombus, nor do they reverse tissue damage.
Associated with the use of existing anticoagulants is the hazard of hemorrhage, which may under some conditions be greater than the clinical benefits otherwise provided by the use thereof. As a result, anticoagulant therapy must be closely monitored. Certain anticoagulants ac~ by inhibiting the synthesis of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors resulting in the sequential depression of, for example, factors II, VII, IX, and X. Representative anticoagulants which are used clinically include coumarin, dicoumarol, phenindione/ and phenprocoumon.
Thrombolytics act by lysing thrombi after they have been formed. Thrombolytics such as streptokinase and urokinase have been indicated for the management of acute myocardial infarctions and have been used successfully to remove intravascular clots if administered soon after thrombosis occurs. However, the lysis effected thereby may be incomplete and nonspecific, i.e., use~ul plasma fibrinogen, in addition to fibrin polymers within clots, is affected. As a result, a common adverse reaction associated with the use of such therapeutics is hemorrhage.
A third classification, antiplatelet drugs, includes drugs which suppress primary hemostasis by altering platelets or their interaction with other circulatory system components. The present invention relates to this classification of antiplatelet drugs.

Reported Developments Specific antiplatelet drugs oper~te by one or several mechanisms. A first example involves reducing the availability of ionized calcium within the platelet cytoplasm thereby impairing activation of the platelet and resultant aggregation. Pharmaceuticals representative of this strategy include prostacyclin, and also Persatine~ (dipyridamole) which may affect calcium concentrations by affecting the concentration of cyclic AMP. Numerous side effects xelated to the administration of these compounds have been reported.
An additional class of antiplatelet drugs acts by inhibiting ~`

WO 92/1719~ PCll/l,'S92/0~47~

~ 10 ~1 O O
the synthesis of thromboxane A2 within the platelet, reducing the platelet activation response. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, such as ibuprofen, phenolbutazone and napthroxane may produce a similar effect by competitive inhibition of a particular cyclooxygenase enzyme, which catalyzes the synthesis of a precursor of thromboxane A2. A
similar therapeutic effect may be derived through the administration of aspirin which has been demonstrated to irreversably acetylate a cyclooxygenase enzyme necessary to generate thromboxane A2. A third anti-platelet mechanism has involved the platelet membrane so as to interfere with surface receptor function. One such drug is dextran, a large branched polysaccharide, which is believed to impair the interaction of fibrinogen with platelet receptors that are exposed during aggregation. Dextran is contraindicated for patients with a history of renal problems or with cardiac impairment. The therapeutic ticlopidine îs stated to inhibit platelet adhesion and aggregation by suppressing the binding of von Willebrand factor and/or fibrinogen to their respective receptors on the platelet surface. However, it has been found that ticlopidene possesses insufficient specificity to eliminate the necessity of administering large doses which, in turn, may be associated with clinical side effects.
The aforementioned pharmaceuticals are ~oreign to the body and may cause numerous adverse clinical side effects, there being no way to prevent such compounds from participating in other aspects of a patient's physiology or biochemistry, particularly if high doses are required. It would be desirable to provide for pharmaceuticals having such specificity for certain of the reactions of hemostasis, that they could be administered to patients at low doses, such doses being much less likely to produce adverse effects in patients.
An example of a pharmaceutical which is representative of a therapeutic that is derived from natural components of the hemostatic process is described in EPO Publication No.
317278. This publication discloses a method for inhibiting thrombosis in a patient by administering to the patient a WO92/1719~ P~ S92/02~7~

therapeutic polypeptide comprised of the amino-terminal region of the ~ chain of platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib, or a subfragment thereof.
The present invention is directed to the provision of antithrombotic polypeptldes derived from a von Willebrand factor, one of the proteins of the hemostatic mechanism.

Summary of the Present Invention In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a polypeptide patterned on a fragment of wild type mature von Willebrand factor (vWF) subunit having one or more binding sites of predetermined affinity for one or more of the ligands selected from the group consisting of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib~, platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, or coagulation factor VIII, said polypeptide having a modified amino acid sequence relative to that of said fragment and an increased binding affinity, relative to said predetermined affinity, for one or more of said ligands.
In one embodiment, this invention provides for host ZO cells containing recombinant vWF DNA sequences in which are expressed biologically active and therapeutically useful polypeptides related to the 52/48 kg/mole (kg/mol) tryptic fragment or domain of mature vWF subunit.
Such polypeptides, when present in monomeric form, may be used as antithrombotic agents. In dimerized form they can be used as antihemorrhagic agents. When expressed in mammalian host cells, such polypeptides are typically also glycosylated.
` In accordance with the practice of this invention, there are provided also biologically active polypeptides which are effective in preventing adhesion of platelets to surfaces, in inhibiting activation or aggregation of platelets, and in inhibiting thrombosis. More specifically there are provided polypeptides which are effective in inhibiting the binding of von Willebrand factor multimers to platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib~ and which are created by expression in host cells of DNA sequences which reflect one or more mutations WO92/1719~ PCT/US92/0247~

determined from the vWF gene in one or more patients having Type IIB von Willebrand disease, said mutations providing in whole, or in part, the molecular basis for the disease.
Accordingly, there is provided a process for producing from DNA encoding mature von Willebrand factor subunlt, or a fragment thereof, a blologically active polypeptide which process comprises the steps of (A) providing a DNA sequence encoding a mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, in which one or more wild type codons are replaced by codons specifying one or more amino acid mutations found in the vWF
DNA sequence of one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients; (B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said biologically active polypeptide; (C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions which cause expression within said host cell of the polypeptide.
Known mutations reflective of the genotype and phenotype of ~ype IIB von Willebrand disease and suitable for incorporation into the DNA sequences useful in the practice of the invention include Trp5s0 - Cys550; Ar~ Trp5~1; Ar~3 Trp~3; Val553 - Met553; and Glys6~ _ Asp561 It is believed that the inventionl and the mutagenesis and protein expression procedures thereof, will be widely practiced in the art to gen~erate mutant fragments of mature von Willebrand factor subunit with improved therapeutic utility.
Particularly useful examples of antithrombotic polypeptides produced according to the practice of the invention include the following:
(A) a monomeric polypeptide patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises ~he amino acid sequence 35 . of that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit beginning approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ending approximately at residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof, in which when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or Wos~/1719~ CT/~'S92/0~17 more amino acid residues thereof are replaced by the corresponding residues found at the equivalent sequence positions of mature vWF subunit as isolated from one or more humans with Type IIB von Willebrand disease; and (B) a polypeptide according to (A) above in which each of cysteine residues 459, 462, ~L64, 471 and 474 thereof is replaced by a residue of glycine, and in which cysteine residues 509 and 695 thereof are linked by an intrachain disulfide bond.
Although the invention is described :initially in terms of reproducing in recombinant DNA molecules particular mutations determined from the vWF encoding DNA of Type IIB
disease patients, biologically active vWF-derived polypeptides having similar or higher affinities for the glycoprotein Ib(~) receptors of platelets and resultant therapeutic utility may be artificially created by site specific and random mutagenesis procedures.
Representative of these procedures is a process for generating a biologically active mutant amino acid sequence patterned upon wild type mature von Willebrand fac~or subunit or a fragment thereof, said sequence demonstrating relative to wild type subunit, or the said fragment thereof, an increased binding affinity for GPIb~, and comprising the steps of:
(A~ providing a population of oligonucleotides corresponding to one or more mature vWF subunit DNA
~ubsequences and containing random mutations within one or more of the codons within said subsequences;

(B) using the resultant population of mutant oligonucleotides in a mutagenesis procedure with a vWF or vWF fragment-encoding DNA sequence as c template, thereby creating a random population of mutagenized sequences;
(C) inserting the mixture of mutagenized vWF or vWF
fragment-encoding DNA sequences into plasmids or vectors thereby creating a population of expression plasmids or viral expression vectors;

... : : , WO92/1719~ P~T/US92/~247~
~0710~ 8 (D) inserting the resultant population of expression plasmids or viral expression vectors into suitable host cells;
(E) screening individual colonies or cultures of resultant host cells for expression of vWF-derived polypeptides having properties rleflective of Type IIB vWF or of fragments thereof;
(F) having determined the DNA sequence of a vWF insert in a colony or culture of a host cell expressing vWF-derived polypeptide having said reflective properties;
(G) expressing the mutagenized DNA sequence, or an additional DNA sequence which is con~tructed to reflect the changes identified in the mutagenized sequence, in a host cell;
(H) isolating the mutant vWF-derived polypeptide produced thereby.
Speaking more generally it is noted that von Willebrand ~actor is an unusually large, multivalent plasma protein that is involved in platelet adhesion to the subendothelium and in the formation of platelet plugs at sites of vascular injury.
Due specially to its multivalent character, the protein links plate}ets to each other, to collagen and to glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans, and also protects and then localizes coagulation factor VIII to the site of a forming blood clot. The bivalent or multivalent character of circulating vWF and the multiple potential function~ of each mature subunit thereof provide a unique opportunity to affect in vivo binding properties through mutagenesis o~ or covalent alteration of the relevant binding sites.
Accordingly there is provided a process for producing a polypeptide useful for treating or inhibiting thrombosis, said polypeptide being patterned upon the wild type mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, and being derived -therefrom as follows:
(A) providing a mutant vWF D~A sequence, said mutant sequence being characterized as encoding a mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, the encoded polypeptide having, relative to the corresponding WO92/17192 ~ CT/U~92/0247 wild type polypeptide sequence, an increased binding affinity for one or more of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib~, platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa or coagulation factor VIII;
(B) further mutagenizing the DNA sequence of (A) above so that the encoded polypeptide expressed therefrom has a lesser tendency to participate in disulfide-induced dimerization or multimerization than the polypeptide encoded by the DNA sequence of (A) above; and (C) expressing the further mutagenized DNA sequence of (B) above in a host cell from which an undimerized form of the encoded polypeptide may be extracted or secreted.
Polypeptides of the present invention possess high specificity for target binding domains on other macromolecules, including platelet receptors involved in the hemostatic mechanism. Generally speaking, polypeptides of the present invention are believed to function by preventing platelet adhesion, activation and aggregation, and are expected to be effective at concentrations which are not associated with clinically disadvantageous side effects.

Brief Description of the Drawinqs Figure l is a table which shows the previously reported amino acid and DNA se~uence for the mature von Willebrand factor subunit (human) between residue 431 and residue 750 thereof (see also S~Q ID N0: l).
Figure 2 is a drawing of the disulfide dependent association of two 5~/48 kg/mol vWF fragments to form a 116 kg/mol homodimer.
Figure 3 is a graph which shows the effect of two Type IIB mutations on the ability of bacterially expressed vWF
fragments to bind to platelets.
Figure 4 is a graph which shows the effect of a single Type I B mutation on the ability of bacterially-expressed vWF
fragments to bind platelets at two different concentrations WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7~

of a monocl~1~7 ~ ody which competes with vWF fragments for platelet GPIb~ receptor.
Figure 5 is a map of the pCDM8 plasmid.
Figure 6 is a graph which shows the effect of the Trp5s0 ~ Cys550 mutation on the affinity of the reduced and alkylated 36 kg/mol vWF fragment for platelet GPIb~ receptor.
Figure 7 is a graph which shows the effect of the Trp553 - Cys550 mutation on the affinity of the 116 kg/mol homodimeric vWF fragment for platelet GPIb~ receptor.

lo Definltlons Unless indicated otherwise herein, the following terms have the indicated meanings.

Codon - A DNA sequence of three nucleotides (a triplet) which encodes through mRNA an amino acid, a translation start signal or a translation termination signal. For example, the DNA nucleotide triplets TTA, TTG, CTT, CTC, CTA and CTG
encode the amino acid leucine ("Leu"); TAG, TAA and TGA are translation stop signals; and ATG is a translation start signal encoding methionine.
Structural Gene - A DNA sequence which encodes through its corresponding messenger RNA ("mRNA") a sequence of amino acids characteristic of a specific polypeptide. Structural genes may also have RNAs as their primary product such as transfer RNAs (tRNAs) or ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs).
Transcription - The process of producing RNA from a structural gene.
Translation - The process of producing a polypeptide ~rom ~RNA.
Coding Sequence (Encoding DNA! - DNA sequences which, in ~he appropriate reading frame, code ~or the amino acids of a protein. For the purpose of the present invention, it should be understood that the synthesis or use of a coding sequence may necessarily involve synthesis or use of the corresponding complementary strand, as shown by: 5'-CGG GGA GGA-3'/3'-GCC CCT CCT-5' which "encvdes" the tripeptide NHt-arg-gly-gly-C02H. A discussion of or claim to one strand is deemed WO92/17]9' 11 2 ~ ~ 7 ~ ~ ~ PCT/U~9~/0~47~

to refer to or to claim the other strand and the double stranded counterpart thereof as is appropriate, useful or necessary in the practice of the art.
cDNA - A DNA molecule or sequence which has been enzymatically synthesized from the sequence(s) present in an mRNA template.
Transcribed Strand - The DNA strand whose nucleotide sequence is read 3' ~ 5' by RNA polymerase to produce mRNA. This strand is also referred to as the noncodina strand.
Codinq Strand or Non-Transcribed Strand - This strand is the antiparallel compliment of the transcribed strand and has a base sequence identical to that of the mRNA produced from the transcribed strand except that thymine bases are present (instead of uracil bases of the mRNA). It is referred to as "coding" because like mRNA, and when examined 5' - 3', the codons for translation may be directly discerned.
ssion - The process undergone by a structural gene to produce a product. In the case of a protein product, it is a combination of transcription and translation.
Mutation - A hereditable change in the genetic in~ormation of a DNA molecule.
Recombinant DNA Molecule - A molecule consisti~g of se~ments o~ DNA from different genomes which have been joined end-to-end and have, or can be modified to have, the capacity to in~ect some host cell and be maintained therein.
Replicon - the DNA required for replication in a particular organism. It includes an origin of replication.
Bioloaical Activity - One or more functions, effects of, activities performed or caused by a molecule in a biological context (that is, in an organism or in an in vitrQ
facsimile). A characteristic biological activity of the 116 kg/mol homodimeric fragment of the mature von Wil}ebrand factor subunit is the potential ability to bind to more than one platelet GPIb receptor thereby enabling the molecule to facilitate aggregation of platelets in the presence of ristocetin. Other resultant or related effects of the 116 kg/mol species include function as a thrombotic and the induction of platelet activation, and/or adhesion to surfaces. Thus such a fragment has therapeutic utility in wos2/1719~ PCT/~S92/02~7~
21071~0 12 the treatment of von Willebrand disease, as an antihemorrhagic agent.
Similarly, a characteristic biological activity of the 5~/48 kg/mol monomeric fragm~nt of the mature von Willebrand factor subunit is the potential ability to bind to only one platelet GPIb receptor thereby enabling the molecule to inhibit botrocetin-induced binding of multimeric vWF to platelets. Other resultant or related ef~ects of the undimerized 52/48 kg/mol species include inhibition of platelet activation, aggregation, or adhesion to surfaces.
Thus, such a fragment has therapeutic utility as an antithrombotic agent.
Mutant Polypeptide - A polypeptide derived from DNA encoding a parent polypeptide, the DNA having been mutated leading to the presence of one or more altered codons which dictate the placement, during translation, into the mutant polypeptide amino acid seguence of one or more substitute amino acids.
educinq Con~itions - Refers to the presence of a "reducing"
agent in a solution containing von Willebrand factor, or polypeptides derived therefrom, which agent causes the disruption of disulfide bonds of the vWF. ~owever, consistent with usage typical in the art, the "reducing"
agent such as dithiothreitol ~DTT) causes a vWF disulfide bond to be broken by formina a disulfide bond between a vWF
cysteine and the DTT with no net change in oxidation state of the involved sulfur atoms.
Phaqe or Bacterio~haqe - Bacterial virus many of which consist of DNA sequences encapsulated in a protein envelope or coat ("capsid").
Promoter - DNA sequences upstream from a gene which promote its transcription.
Cloninq Vehicle ~Vector) - A plasmid, phage DNA or other DNA
sequence which is able to replicate in a host cell, typically characterized by one or a small number of endonuclease recognition sites at which such DNA sequences may be cut in a determinable ~ashion for the insertion of heterologous DNA
without attendant loss of an essential biological fur1ction of the DNA, e.g., replication, production of coat proteins or loss of expression control regions such as promoters or W092/l7l9_ 13 '~Ji~ f~ 2/0247~

binding sites, and which may contain a selectable gene marker suitable for use in the identification of host ~ells transformed therewith, e.g., tetracycline resistance or ampicillin resistance.
Plasmid - A nonchromosomal double-stranded DNA sequence comprising an intact "replicon" such that the plasmid is replicated in a host cell. When the plasmid is placed within a procaryotic or eucaryotic host cell, the characteristics of that cell may be changed (or transformed) as a result of the DNA of the plasmid. For example, a plasmid carrying the gene for tetracycline resistance ~TetR) transforms a cell previously sensitive to tetracycline into one which is resistant to it. A cell transformed by a plasmid is called a "transformant."
Cloninq - The process of obtaining a population of organisms, or DNA sequences or other macromolecules derived from one such organism or sequence by asexual reproduction or DNA
replication.
~x~ression Plasmi~ - A plasmid into which has been inserted the DNA being cloned, such as the von Willebrand factor structural gene. The DNA sequence inserted therein may also contain sequences which control the translation of mRNA
resultant therefrom, and contain restriction endonuclease sites which facilitated assembly of, and may facilitate further modification of, said expression plasmid. An expression plasmid is capa~le of directing, in a host cell, the expression therein of the encoded polypeptide and usually contains a transcription promoter upstream from the DNA
sequence of the encoded structural gene. An expression plasmid may or may not become integrated into the host chromosomal DNA. For the purpose of this invention, an integrated plasmid is nonetheless referred to as an expression plasmid.
Viral Expression Vector - A viral expression vector is similar to an expression plasmid except that the DNA may be packaged into a viral particle that can transfect cells throu~h a natural biological process.
Downstream - A nucleotide of the transcribed strand of a structural gene is said to be downstream from another section WV92/17192 PCT/~IS92/02~7~
2107 ~ 0~ 14 ``
of the gene if the nucleotide is normally read by RNA
polymerase after the earlier section of the gene. The complimentary nucleotide of the nontranscribed strand, or the corresponding base pair within the double stranded form of the DNA, are also denominated downstream.
Additionally, and making reference to the direction of transcription and of translation within the structural gene, a restriction endonuclease sequence added upstream (or 5') to the gene means it is added before the sequence encoding the amino terminal end of the protein, while a modification created downstream (or 3') to the structural gene means that it is beyond the carboxy terminus-encoding region thereof.
von Willebrand factor ~vWF) - It is understood that all references herein to von Willebrand factor refer to vWF in humans. The term "von Willebrand factor" is intended to include within its scope any and all of the tenns which are defined below.
Pre-pro-vWF - von Willebrand factor is subject to extensive posttranslational processing. "Pre-pro-vWF" contains (from the N to the C terminus) a signal peptide comprised of approximately 22 amino acid residues, a propeptide of approximately 741 amino acids, and then the approximate 2,050 residues of circulating vWF.
Pro-vWF - The signal peptide has been removed from pre-pro-vWF.Mature vWF - Circulating vWF as found in the plasma or as bound to the subendothelium. It consists of a population of polypeptide monomers which are typically associated into numerous species of multimers thereof, each subunit of which being 2,050 residues in length. Additionally, when expressed in mammalian cells, mature vWF is usually glycosylated.
Additionally, von Willebrand factor is found as a component of the subendothelial matrix, as a component of the ~-granules secreted by activated platelets, and as a circulating blood plasma protein. It is possible that the three-dimensional subunit structure or multisubunit structure of vWF varies in these different contexts potentially caused, for example, by differences in glycosylation. Such differences do not prevent useful therapeutic vWF-derived WO92/1719' ~ CT/~'S92/0247 polypeptides from being produced from the vWF DNA sequences of endothelial cells or megakaryocytes according to the practice of this invention.
Furthermore, it is possible that there are minor biologically unimportant differences between the actual DNAs and polypeptides manipulated or otherwise utilized in the practice of the invention and the structural sequences of amino acids or nucleotides thereof as reported herein. It is understood that the invention encompasses any such biologically unimportant variations. It is also understood that within the genome of the human population there are alleles encoding vWF subunits which contain unimportant amino acid substitutes unrelated to Type IIB disease. It is understood that the invention also encompasses the use of any such variant sequences.
Heparin Bindinq Site - A domain comprised of one or more regions of amino acid primary sequences of one or more mature vWF subunits having a specific binding affinity for heparin and/or other glycosaminoglycans and/or one or more species of proteoglycans.
von Willebrand factor contains binding sites having affinity for glycosaminoglycans, said sites being known to demonstrate affinity for heparin or other glycosaminoglycans patterned upon repeating units similar to those of heparin.
Because of these "heparin binding sites," vWF also has affinity for proteoglycans (glycosaminoglycans anchored to a protein core) typically found in the subendothelium.
Si~nal Peptide ~Sequence~ - A signal peptide is the sequence of amino acids in a newly translated polypeptide which signals translocation of the polypeptide across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum and into the secretory pathway ~f the cell. A signal peptide typically occurs at the beginning (amino terminus) of the protein and is 20-40 amino acids long with a stretch of approximately 5-15 hydrophobic amino acids in its center. Typically the signal se~uence is proteolytically cleaved from the protein during, or soon after, the process of translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum. That portion of a gene or cDNA encoding a signal peptide may also be referred to as a signal sequence.

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/0247~
2~71~0 16 Wild Type Amino Acid Sequence - refers to the amino acid sequence of mature vWF subunit, or of a fragment thereof, which is present in the large majority of humans, and refers also to any mutant amino acid sequence as isolated from vWF
of a particular person if no detectable functional differences in the vWF with respect to its interaction with GPIb~ result therefrom in humans.
Modified Amino Acid Sequence - reflects any change in the primary structure of a sequence of amino acids of mature vWF
subunit compared to wild type sequence. Representative examples of modifications with respect to one or more amino acid residues at one or more primary sequence positions in a polypeptide include deletions, additions, substitutions and the covalent labelling of amino acids present therein or the addition of amino acids containing such labels, i.e., radicals or blocking groups which affect the properties of the amino acid residues so labelled.
Peptide - for the puxposes of this invention, the terms "peptide" and "polypeptide" are interchangable.
Purified or Substantially in Pure Form - when used with respect to one or more vWF-encoding DNAs or vWF-derived polypeptides, these and similar terms mean that the composition is substantially free of most of the cellular protoplasm, non vWF-protein, or extracellular material with which the DNA or polypeptide normally occurs in the body.
Monomeric - when used with respect to polypeptides, "monomeric" refers to a polypeptide which is not covalently linked to another polypeptide. "Dimeric" refers to a covalent association of two monomers.
Fraoment - when used with respect to vWF subunit, this term refers to any sequence composed of less than the 2,050 amino acid residues of the mature subunit which can be generated by deleting one or more residues from either the amino or the carboxy terminals of said subunit, or by deletion of one or more residues within the subunit. When used with respect to mature multimeric vWF, the term refers to any combination of subunits and/or fragments of subunits having a combined molecular weight less than about 30 times the weight of a single subunit.

W09/1719 17 ~ ~q~l7 ~ ~ ~CT/~'S92/02~7~

vWF-Derived PolypePtide - a vWF-derived polypeptide refers to any amino acid sequence which is patterned upon the 2,050 residue mature vWF subunit sequence, or any combinations of subsets thereof, and which contains any of the above defined "modifications". Such derived polypeptides can be made through expression of an appropriate encoding DNA or by chemical modification of vWF subunit or a fragment thereof.
Other terms used in connection with the description of vWF-derived polypeptides of the invention include "comparable wild type sequence" and "equivalent sequence position" which are best described by way of example.
With respect to the residue 441-730 fragment of mature vWF subunit containing a cysteine residue at position 550, the "comparable wild type sequence" is the 441-730 ~ragment containing tryptophan at position 550. ~Equivalent sequence position" means that the substituted amino acid (for example Cys550) occupies the same position in the vWF-derived polypeptide (position 550) as in the amino acid sequence of vWF subunit from the Type IIB patient from which the mutation was identified, and thus, for example, the incorporation of a Trp550-Cys550 mutation into a vWF-derived polypeptide would not affect the positioning of Lys~ or Val551.
Table l shows the standard three letter designations for amino acids as used in the application.

WO92/17192 PCT/~IS92/02~7 2 i 0 7lO 0 l8 TABLE I
Alanine Ala Cysteine Cys Aspartic Acid Asp 5 Glutamic Acid Glu Phenylalanine Phe Glycine Gly Histidine His Isoleucine Ile lO Lysine Lys Leucine Leu Methionine Met Asparagine Asn Proline Pro 15 Glutamine Gln Arginine Arg Serine Ser Threonine Thr Valine Val 20 Tryptophan Trp Tyrosine Tyr Detailed Description of the Invention A ~Sequence Listing" pursuant to 37 CFR 1.821~c) for nucleotide and amino acid sequences disclosed or referred to herein is appended and made part of this application.
As set forth above, both the antithrombotic and antihemorrhagic polypeptides of the present invention are based upon fragments of the natural occurring protein von Willebrand factor. For background purposes, there is set forth hereafter information concerning this protein and its role in hemostasis and thr~ombosis.

Description of the Role_of vWF in Hemostasis and Thrombosis vWF performs an essential role in normal hemostasis during vascular injury and is also of central importance in the pathogenesis of acute thrombotic occlusions in diseased blood vessels. Both of these roles involve the interaction of vWF with platelets which are induced to bind at the affected site and are then crosslinked. It is believed that single platelets first adhPre to a thrombogenic surface after which they become activated, a process involving major metabolic changes and significant morphological changes within the platelet. Activation is evidenced by the discharge WO92/1719 ~ CT/~S92/02~7 of platelet storage granules containing adhesive substances such as von Willebrand factor (an adhesive protein), and the expression on the surface of the platelet of additional functional adhesive sites. Once activated, and as a part of normal hemostasis, platelet cells become aggregated, a process which involves extensive cross~ king of the platelet cells with additional types of adhesive proteins.
As stated above, these processes are normal as a physiologic response to vascular injury. However, they may lead in patholoyic circumstances, such as in diseased vessels, to formation of undesired platelet thrombi with resultant vascular occlusion.
Other circumstances in which it is desirable to prevent deposition of platelets in blood vessels include the prevention and treatment of stroke, and to prevent occlusion of arterial grafts. Platelet thrombus formation during surgical procedures may also interfere with attempts to relieve preexisting vessel obstructions.
The adhesion of platelets to damaged or diseased vessels occurs through mechanisms that involve specific platelet membrane receptors which interact with specialized adhesive molecules. One such platelet receptor is the glycoprotein Ib-IX complex which consists of a noncovalent association of two integral membrane proteins, glycoprotein Ib ~GPIb) and glycoprotein IX (GPIX). The adhesive ligand of the GPIb-IX
complex is the protein von ~illebrand factor which is found as a component of the subendothelial matrix, as a co~ponent of the ~-granules secreted by activated platelets, and also as a circulating blood plasma protein. The actual binding site of the vWF to the GPIb-IX receptor has been localized on the amino terminal region of the ~ chain of glycoprotein Ib which is represented by GPIb(~).
- von Willebrand factor exists as a series of high molecular weight multimers of up to 30 glycosylated subunits per multimer in which the subunits are believed to be identical, with each having an approximate molecular weight of Z70,000 (Z70 kg/mol). Formation of an initial monolayer of platelets covering injured endothelial surfaces is believed to involve a bridging function in which surface .. . ..

WO92/171~' PCT/~'S9'/0247~
2~71~ 20 bound multimeric vWF binds on the one side to components of the subendothelium, such as collagen or proteoglycans, and on the other side to the GPIb-IX receptor of a platelet membrane. Evidence that von Willebrand factor is necessary for thrombus formation has been provided by studies using anti-vWF monoclonal antibodies to induce a deficieny in circulating vWF, Bellinger, D.A. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci.~ USA, 84, 8100-8104 (1987), and by studies utilizing a monoclonal antibody specific for the platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor, Coller, B.S. et al., Blood, 68, 783 (1986). The essential role of von Willebrand factor in hemostasis and thrombosis is further evidenced in patients who are deficient in the glycoprotein Ib-IX complex. These persons exhibit a disease state characterized by severe bleeding following nominal vascular injury under otherwise nonpathologic conditions.
It is believed that the interaction of multimeric vWF
with glycoprotein Ib-IX complex (at GPIb(~)) results in platelet activation and facilitates the recruitment of additional platelets to a now growing thrombus. The rapidly accumulating platelets are also crosslinked (aggregated) by the binding of fibrinogen at platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa receptor sites, and possibly also by vWF at these sites, and/or at additional glycoprotein Ib-IX receptor sites. In addition, the glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor may also be involved in the formation of the initial monolayer of platelets. Of particular imPortance in this process is the multimeric and multivalent character of circulating vWF, which enables the macromolecule to effectively carry out its binding and bridging functions.
Inactivation of the GPIb~ or GPIIb/IIIa receptors on the platelets of a patient or inactivation of the binding sites for vWF located in the subendothelium of a patient's vascular system, thereby inhibiting the bridging ability of vWF, would be of great medical importance for treating or inhibiting thrombosis. Accordingly, the present invention relates to the development of polypeptides which are effective in accomplishing the foregoing.

WO9t/1719~ PCT/US92/02~7 21 21 ~7 ~ ~
Although preventing unwanted thrombi is of great importance, there are circumstances where promoting thrombus formation is desirable. von Willebrand disease, the most common of the bleeding disorders, is the term used to describe a heterogeneous disease state which results when von Willebrand factor is produced in inadequate quantities or when circulating vWF molecules are somehow defective.
Various subtypes of the disease have been described. It is apparent that supplying the bridging function of vWF is of central importance in the treatment of patients afflicted with von Willebrand disease. The present invention is concerned with preparation of fragments of von Willebrand factor capable of pPrforming a bridging function between the GPIb(~) receptor or GPIIb/I~Ia receptor of the platelet membrane and a receptor on another platelet, or between such a receptor and components of the subendothelium, thereby performing in affected individuals the crucial physiological role of native multimeric von Willebrand factor.

Information Concerning the Structure of vWF
and the Desiqn of Therapeutics Derived Therefrom As mentioned above, von Willebrand factor which circulates in the blood exists as a series of high molecular weight multimers containing up to 30 glycosylated subunits per multimer in which the subunits are b~lieved to be identical, each having an approximate molecular weight of about 270 kgtmol. The circulating "mature" human subunit consists of 2050 amino acid residues. Its structure is the final result of extensive post-translational processing.
von Willebrand factor is synthesized in endothelial cells and megakaryocytesO The vWF mRNA is comprised of approximately 9,000 bases and encodes for a polypeptide containing 2,813 amino acid residues. This protein is known as 'Ipre-pro-vWF''. After translation and entry into the endoplasmic reticulum, the von Willebrand factor subunit is believed to rapidly dimerize via disulfide bonds involving the carboxy and amino termini regions of respective subunits.
Associated with the passages of pre-pro-vWF into the endoplasmic reticulum is the cleavage of the 22 amino acid WO92/17192 PCT/~'S92/02~7~
2107~ 22 signal peptide resulting in the "pro vWF" form of the polypeptide.
Other post translational even~s, the timing of which ls not fully understood, include glycosylation of at least 22 sites, sulfation, and finally cleavage of a ~41 amino acid sequence, the propeptide, from the amino terminal end of the pro-subunit. Finally, dimerized mature v'WF subunits (each subunit now comprising 2050 amino acids) are assembled into multimers of larger size by formation of interchain disulfide bonds.
The mature vWF protein from endothelial cells is either secreted constitutively or stored in Weibel-Palade bodies for later release. vWF from megakaryocytes is packaged into the alpha granules of platelets and is secreted at the-time of platelet activation.
The domain of the von Willebrand factor subunit which binds to the platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib-IX receptor (GPIb(~)) has been identified within a fragment of vWF. The fragment may be generated by trypsin digestion, followed by disulfide reduction, and extends from approximately residue 449 (valine) of the circulating subunit to approximately residue 728 (lysine) thereof. Current evidence indicates that this segment also contains (between residues 509 and 695 thereof) binding domains for components of the subendothelium, such as collagen and proteoglycans, although other regions of the mature vWF subunit may be more important in recognizing these substances (an additional proteoglycan or heparin binding site is located in residues 1-272 o~ the mature subunit and an additional collagen binding site within residues 9lO-lllO thereof). The tetrapeptide Arg Gly Asp Ser (SEQ ID NO: 2) ~residues 1744 to 1747), a sequence which vWF
shares with many othsr adhesive proteins, is believed to represont the platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa binding site.
The primary and tertiary structure of von Willebrand factor and the location o~ functional domains thereof is reviewed by Titani, K. et al., 7'Primary Structure of Human von Willebrand Factor" in Coaaulation and Bleedinq Disorders: The Role of Factor VIII and von Willebrand Factor, T. Zimmerman and Z.M.
Ruggeri, eds., Marcel Dekker, New York, 1989.

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 23 ~ a/~
Figure 1 shows the previously reported amino acid and DNA sequence for the mature von Willebrand factor subunit (human) between residue 431 and residue 750. The 52/48 kg/mol fragment produced by tryptic digestion has an amino terminus at residue 449 (valine) and extends approximately to residue 728 (lysine). Amino acids are shown by standard three letter designations. The DNA sequence is represented by the coding strand (non-transcribed strand). Very little polymorphism has been reported in the 52~48 human sequence with one significant exception - histidine/aspartic acid at position 709, see Mancuso, D.J. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 264(33), 19514-19527, Table V, (1989). (See also SEQ ID NO:
1) ~
As described in the parent '606 application, polypeptides derived from the above mentioned region of the circulating (mature) von Willebrand factor subunit - from approximately residue 4~9 to approximately residue 728, or subsets thereof are considered useful as antithrombotic pharmaceuticals when added to blood in such sufficient amounts as to compete successfully with multimeric vWF for platelet GPlb(~) receptor sites, thereby preventing monolayer formation by, or crosslinking of~ the platelets in circumstances where thrombus formation is undesirable, such as in the treatment of vascular disorders. The '606 application identifies numerous publications which relate to the structure, function and molecular genetics of von Willebrand factor, such publications being incorporated herein by reference.
With respect to the mutant therapeutic antithrombotic polypeptides of the present invention, the following information concerning vWF is of particular interest.
A fragment of mature von Willebrand factor having platelet glycoprotein lb(~) binding activity and of approximately 116,000 tll6 kg/mol) molecular weight is isolated by digesting vWF with trypsin. If the 116 kg/mol fragment is treated with a reducing agent capable of cleaving disulfide bonds, a pair of identical fragments is generated~
Each of the identical fragments (which together comprise the 116 kg/mol polypeptide) has an apparent molecular weight of WO 92/1719~ PCI`/ ~!s92/o ;!47:~
21~710~ 24 about 52,000 (52 kg/mol). (Polypeptide molecular weight are typically measured by migration, relative to standards, in a denaturing gel electrophoresis system. Weight values which result are only approximate.) Typically, the 52, 000 molecular weight fragment is referred to as a "52/48" fragment reflectin~ the fact that human enzyme systems glycosylate the fra~ment contributing to its molecular weight. The amount of glycosylation varies from molecule to molecule, with two weights, 52,000 and 48,000, being most common.
The 52/~8 ~ragment has been demonstrated to have as its amino-terminus residue 449 ~valine) of the mature subunit, and as its carboxy-terminus residue 728 (lysine) thereof.
Without the additional weight contributed by glycosylation, the polypeptide has a molecular weight of approximately 38,000.
The 52/48 fragment has been demonstrated to competitively inhibit the binding of von Willebrand factor to platelets. However, manipulation of the 52/48 fragment or its unglycosylated 38 kg/mol equivalent has proved difficult.
Successful manipulation of the fragment has typically required that the cysteine residues thereof be reduced and permanently alkylated. Without this treatment, undesired reaction of the cysteine residues thereof invariably occurs, leading to the formation of insoluble and biologically inactive polypeptide aggregates unsuited for ef~ective use as therapeutics.
It is known that the residue 449-728 fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, which contains the platelet glycoprotein Ib(~ binding domain, has cysteine residues at positions 459, 462, 464, 471, 474, 509 and 695. It is known also that all of the cysteine residues of the mature vWF
subunit are involved in disulfide bonds. (Legaz, et al., J.
Biol. Chem., 248, 3946-3955 (1973)).
Marti, T. et al. Biochemistry, 26, 8099-8109 (1987) conclusively identified mature subunit residues 471 and 474 as being involved in an intra~hain disulfide bond. Residues 509 and 695 were identified as being involved in a disulfide bond, althouqh it was not demonstrated whether this pairing WO 92/17191 PCT/~'S92/0247 25 ~
was intrachain or interchain (that is, within the same mature vWF subunit).
Mohri, H. et al. J. Blol. Chem., 263(34), 17901-17904 (1988) inhibited the ristocetin-induced binding of ~
labelled multimeric vWF to formalin-fixed platelets with peptide subfragments of the 449-728 subunit fragment.
Peptide subfragments fifteen residues in length were synthesized and tested. Those peptides which represent subunit sequence contained within, or overlapping with, two distinct regions Leu469 to Asp498 and Glu689 to Val7~3 were found to be active. Although individual peptides were shown to interact with GPIb(~) receptor, a synergistic eff~ct was noted when two peptides (one from each region) were used, suggesting that the two sequences are in close spatial relation in the correctly folded vWF molecule even though they are far apart in the vWF subunit primary sequence.
Mohri, H. et al. tested their hypothesis by using the 15 residue peptides to map the epitopes of several murine monoclonal anti-vWF antibodies which were selected because of their ability to block the vWF-GPIb(~) interaction. The epitope of NMC-4 was found to map into the same two discrete regions of the vWF amino acid se~uence previously noted as having GPIb(~) receptor binding capability (Leu~9-Asp498 and Glu689-Val713). T~e epitope was demonstrated to require the simultaneous presence of amino acid sequence from both primary sequence regions as demonstrated by the binding of NMC-4 to the homodimeric 116 kg/mol vWF subunit fragment in unreduced form but not to the reduced 52/48 fragment.
Mohri concluded that the GPIb(~) binding domain of vWF
was formed by residues contained in two discontinuous sequences Cys474-Pro4~B and Leu6~-Pro7~ maintained in proper conformation in native vWF by disulfide bonding, although the authors were unable to identify the cysteine residue which formed the stabilizing bond(s) and whether the bonds were intra or interchain.
Inasmuch as the present invention is concerned with the production of certain mutant polypeptides that are cysteine-deficient relative to the parent polypeptide, there is set forth below background information concerning the sulfur-WO92/17192 - PCT/~IS92/0247~
~1~71~0 26 containing amino acid cysteine and the nature of intrachain and interchain disulfide bonds which are present in that fragment of a mature vWF subunit comprising approximately residue position 449 to 728, or which lin~ the subunit fragment to similar domains on other subunits.

Information Concernina Cysteine and Disulfide Bonds Cysteine is unique among the amino acids which typically form the primary sequence of proteins in that, with rare exceptions, it is the only amino acid which forms a covalent bond to another residue of the protein other than a backbone amide linkage, and thereby alters the three-dimensional structure of the polypeptide.
The thiol group (SH) of a cysteine residue in a polypeptide is capable of combining with the equivalent group of another cysteine to form a covalent disulfide bridge (-S-S-). Since cysteine residues otherwise far apart in the primary sequence of the molecule can be combined in this way, disulflde bonds are a potentially important factor in determining the three dimensional structure of a protein.
In fact for many proteins, their structures, catalytic activities, or other functions require that certain disulfide bonds be formed. If a disulfide bond forms between two cysteines contained within the primary sequence of one polypeptide, the bond is defined as "intrachain." If the cysteines forming a disulfide bond are found on different protein molecules, or polypeptides thereof, the bond is defined as "interchain."
The fragment of mature von Willebrand ~actor subunit (approximate residues 449 to 728) which contains the platelet glycoprotein lbf~) binding domain, and which is thus useful in the design of antithrombotic therapeutics, contains 7 cy~teine residues, at positions 459, 462, 464, 471, 474, 509 and 695 thereof.
There is hereafter provided a first embodiment of the invention involving recombinant DNA molecules expressed in host bacterial cells and suitable for the expression of therapeutic polypeptides patterned on vWF, and a second embodiment involving recombinant DNA molecules expressed in WO92/1719' ~ ~ 7 i ~ S92/0247~

host eucaryotic cells and suitable for the expression of therapeutic polypeptides patterned on vWF, and a third embodiment of the invention comprising the construction and utilization of vWF-derived polypeptides reflecting enhanced affinity for GPIb~ and patterned upon the polypeptides of the aforementioned first and second embodiments.

First Embodiment of the Invention (U.S. Serial No. 07/600,183) A first embodiment of the inventi~n provides for polypèptides derived from the residue 449-728 region of the mature von Willebrand factor subunit which are useful in the treatment of vascular disorders such as thrombosis.
Among the polypeptides so provided are (A) a polypeptide patterned upon a parent polypeptide and comprising the amino acid sequence of that fra~ment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit which begins approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ends at approximately residue .733 (valine), or any subset thereof, in which one or more of the cysteine residues normally present in the parent polypeptide, or subset thereof, have been deleted and/or replaced by one or more other amino acids, said polypeptide having therefore less tendency than the parent polypeptide, or subset thereof, to form intra or interchain disulfide bonds in aqueous media at a physiological pH; and (B) a polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 733 (valine) of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or any subset of said sequence which contains residues 509 (cysteine) and 695 (cysteine), wherein one or more of cysteine residues 459, 462, 464, 471, and 474 are deleted or replaced by one or more other amino acids.
Such molecules can be made from DNA which encodes that fra~ment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit comprising essentially the amino acid sequence from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 733 (valine), WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/0247~
21~ r~ ~ o 0 28 ~
or which encodes any subset of said amino acid sequence, a mutant polypeptide fra~ment, or subset thereof, which contains fewer cysteine residues than that of the comparable wild-type amino acid sequence. Preparation of the molecules comprises culturing a host organism trans~ormed with a - biologically functional expression plasmicl which contains a mutant DNA sequence encoding a portion of said von Willebrand ~actor subunit under conditions which effect expression of the mutant von Willebrand factor fragment, or a subset thereof, by the host organism and recovering said fragment therefrom.
The preferred means for effecting mutagenesis of cysteine codons in a vWF DNA to codons encoding amino acids incapable of disulfide bonding is based upon the site directed mutagenesis procedure of Kunkel, T.A., Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 82, 488-492 (1985).
An important aspect of the embodiment is the provision of compositions o~ said vWF~derived polypeptides wh:ich are less prone to aggregation and denaturation caused by undesired disulfide bonding within the inclusion bodies of host expression cells (or resultant from inclusion body solubilization procedures~ than previous preparations. The development employs mutagenesis to limit the number of cysteine residues present within said polypeptides.
More specifically, preparation of a mutant polypeptide fragment which corresponds to that fragment of mature von Willebrand subunit having an amino terminus at residue 441 (arginine) and a carboxy terminus at residue 733 (valine), but which differs therefrom in that each o~ the cysteine residues thereof is replaced by a glycine residue is disclosed. The embodiment also teaches that retention of a certain disulfide bond within polypeptides corresponding to the 449-728 vWF subuni~ region is particularly important for the design of therapeutic molecules derived therefrom.
To accomplish this, a cDNA clone encoding the von Willebrand factor gene (for the pre-propeptide) was utilized.
The cDNA was then subjected to enzymatic amplification in a polymerase chain reaction using oligonucleotides which flanked the indicated region. The first oligonucleotide WO92/1719~ 2 ~ S92~0247 representing coding strand DNA contained an EcoRI site 5' to `the codon for residue 441 (arginine) and extended to the codon for residue 446 (glycine). The second oligonucleotide, corresponding to non-coding strand DNA, encoded amino acids 725 to 733 and encoded 3' to codon 733 a HindIII restriction sequence. The resultant double stranded von Willebrand factor cDNA corresponding to the amino acid sequence from residue 441 to residue 733 (of the mature subunit) was then inserted, using EcoRI and HindIII restrict:ion enzymes, into the double stranded replicative form of bacteriophage M13mpl8 which contains a multiple cloning site having compatible EcoRI and HindIII sequences. Following the procedure of Xunkel, T.A., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82, 488-492 (1985), site directed mutagenesis was performed using hybridizing oligonucleotides suitable for replacing all of the cysteine codons (residue positions 459, 462, 464, 471, 474, 509 and 695) with individual glycine codons tsee Example 1) or 5 of the cysteine codons (residue positions 459, 462, 464, 471 and 474) with individual glycine codons (see Example 4). Mutant double stranded vWF cDNA fragments derived from the procedure were removed from M13mpl8 phage by treatment with EcoRI and HindIII restriction endonucleases, after which the ends of the vWF cDNA fragments were modified with BamHI linkersO
The two types of mutant vWF cDNA, containing either 5 or 7 Cys to Gly mutations, were then separately ~lon~d into the pET-3A expression vector (see Rosenberg, A.H. et al., Gene, 56, 125-136 tl987)) for expression from E.coli strain BL21(DE3), Novagen Co., Madison, WI. pET-3A vehicle containing cDNA for the vWF subunit fragment with 7 cysteine to glycine mutations is referred to as l'p7EII, and as "p5E"
when the contained vWF cDNA fragment encoded the 5 above specified cysteine to glycine mutations. Mutant von Willebrand factor polypeptides produced by bacterial cultures containing expression plasmid p5E were compared with those expressed from cultures containing p7E plasmids. The p5E
mole~ule is capable of forming a disulfide bond between cysteine residue 509 and 695 whereas the p7E molecule cannot.

WO92/17192 PCT/~IS92/02~7 2 1 07t oa 30 The behavior of p5E and p7E extracts was examined using immunological methods (see ~xample 5). vWF-specific murine monoclonal antibodies RG-46 and NMC-4 were used as probes.
RG-46 has been demonstrated to recognize as its epitope a linear sequence of amino acids, comprising residues 694 to 708 within the mature von Willebrand fact:or subunit. The binding of this antibody to its determinant is essentially conformation independent. Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 263(34), 17901-17904 (1988).
NMC-4 however, has as its epitope the domain of the von Willebrand factor subunit which contains the glycoprotein Ib binding site. Mapping of the epitope has demonstratecl that it is contained within two discontinuous domains (comprising approximately mature vWF subunit residues 474 to 488 and also approximately residues 694 to 708) brought into disulfide-dependent association, Mohri, H. et al., supra, although it could not be determined whether the disulfide bond conferring this tertiary conformation in the native vWF molecule was intrachain or interchain. Id. at 17903.
Accordingly, 7.5 ~g samples (of protein) were first run on 10~ SDS-polyacrylamide gels so that the antigenic behavior of particular bands ~under reducing and nonreducing conditions) could be compared with results obtained ~y Coomassie blue staining. Immunoblotting ~"Western Blotting") according to a standard procedure, Burnette, A. Anal.
Biochem., 112, 195-203 (1981), was then performed to compare p5E and p7E extracts.
Briefly, it was ~ound that, under nonreducing conditions, the single chain p5E polypeptide Pragment ~representing the sequence from residue 4~1 to residue 733) displays an approximate 120 fold increase in binding affinity for NMC-4 compared to the comparable cysteine-free species isolated from p7E. After electrophoresis under reducing conditions (utilizing 100 mM DTT), the single chain p5E
species shows a remarkably decreased affinity for NMC-4, which was then very similar to that of the cysteine-free p7E
species under either reduced or nonreduced conditions. NMC-4 also failed, under reducing or non-reducing conditions, to : ` :

WO92/1719~ 2 ~ ~ 7 ~ ~ ~ PCT/~IS92/0247~

recognize as an epitope disulfide-linked dimers from the p5E
extract.
The nitrocellulose filters used to produce autoradio-graphs based on NMC-4 were rescreened with RG-45 by subtracting the initial NMC-4 exposure response, which was kept low through a combination of low antibody titer and short exposure time. The binding of RG-46 to the 36,000 kg/mol p7E polypeptide on the filters was the same whether reducing or non-reducing conditions were chosen, consistPnt with the replacement of all cysteines by glycine in the expressed polypeptide.
A large molecular weight vWF antigen (reactive to RG-46) was present in the p5E polypeptide extract under nonreducing conditions. These p5E vWF aggregates (reflecting interchain disulfide bonds) migrated under reducing conditions in the same position as the p7E polypeptide indicating disruption of their disulfide contacts. However, the large p5E interchain disulfide aggregates which are readily recognized under nonreducing conditions by RG-~6 were not recognized by NMC-4 under either reducing or nonreducing conditions. It was thus demonstrated that the disulfide bond between residues 509 and 695 in native multimeric vWF subunits represents an intrachain contact.
The disulfide bond between residues 471 and 474 of the mature vWF subunit has previously been shown to be an intrachain contact, thus the aforementioned embodiment is able to suggest that inter~chain disulfide bond(s) in multisubunit mature vWF would be formed using one or more of cysteine residues 459, 462 or 464.
This discovery is expected to be particularly useful in the design of therapeutic vWF polypeptides patterned upon the 52/48 tryptic fragment (for use as antithrombotics) or patterned instead upon the 116 kg/mol homodimer thereof (for use as antihemorrhagics).

Disulfide Enqineerinq_in the A3 Sequence Domain The 52/48 tryptic fragment of the mature vWF suhunit has been established to comprise the amino acid sPquence between residues 44g and 728. Contained within that sequence is a WO92/171~2 , PCT/U~92/0247 2107 ~ 32 subfragment consistinq approximately of residues 500 to 700 known as the A~ domain. This domain has substantial amino acid sequence homology to the A2 and A3 domains of the 2,050 residue subunit and which are located at approximately residue positions 710-910 (A2) and 910-1110 (A3). See Titani, K. et al "Primary Structure of Human von Willebrand Factor"
in Coa~ulation and Bleedinq Disorders, Marcel Dekker, New York, 1989.
It has been discovered that these "A" domains also share substantial amino acid sequence homology ~at minimum approximately 15-20~) with similar domains in numerous other adhesive proteins. Twenty percent sequence homology is generally recognized as being far to great to appear by chance. As recognized by Mancuso, D.J. et al J. Biol Chem, 15 264~33) 19514-19527 (1989), these homologies clearly suggest that the vWF subunit is the product of a mosaic gene which contains subregions shared by many other proteins. These homologies probably arose from repeated gene segment duplication and exon shuffling.
Pharmacologically active collagen binding polypeptides can be derived ~rom the "A3" domain. The A3 domain contains also a pair of cysteine residues which are believed to form in vivo, a loop analogous to the residue 509-695 Al loop structure. The potential utility of this new mutant vWF
fragment as an inhibitor of the binding of multimeric vWF to collagen can be demonstrated following the procedures of Pareti, F.I. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 262(28), 13835-13841 (1987) and Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(29), 17361-17367 (1989).

Second Embodiment of the Invention (U.S. Serial No 07/613.004~
This second embodiment includes within its scope the recognition of certain of the roles performed by cysteine residues present in the residue 449-728 primary sequence fragment of the mature vWF subunit. In this connection, this embodiment confirms that the cysteine 509-695 disulfide bond is an intrachain bond and provides for effective therapeutics incorporating the 509-695 bond for the purpose of treating WO92/17192 2 ~ ~ 7 t ~ ~CT/US92/0247' thrombosis, or for the purpose of treating von Willebrand's disease.
Both the antithrombotic polypeptides and antihemorrhagic polypeptides of this the second embodiment of the invention are based upon that amino acid sequence domain which comprises approximately residues 449 to 728 of the mature von Willebrand factor subunit and which, if fully glycosylated, would bP equivalent in weight to the 52/48 ~g/mol vWF subunit fragment. In practice it is difficult to derive therapeutically useful quantities of such polypeptides from blood plasma. Difficulties include effective separation of 116 kg/mol and 52/48 kg/mol fragments from other components of tryptic digests and effective sterilization of blood-derived components from human viruses such as hepatitis and AIDS. In addition, methods reported in the literature to generate the 52/48 kg/mol monomer from the 116 kg/mol dimer have utilized complete disulfide reduction with resultant loss of tertiary structure. Certain important man:ipulations of the 52/48 fragment, such as replacement of selective cysteine residues to improve product utility and stability, can only be accomplished in a practical sense by recombinant DNA technology.
However, the production by recombinant DNA-directed means of therapeutic vWF polypeptides analogous to the 52/48 tryptic fragment has met with certain limitations. It is desirable that the polypeptide not only be made by the host cells but that it be correctly folded for maximum therapeutic utility. It is believed that the principal factor which has to date prevented the expression of the most therapeutically active forms o~ the 52/48 ~ragment is the incorrect folding of the molecule caused by the linking up of cysteine residues to form incorrect disulfide contacts. In addition, such ' polypeptides appear to exhibit hydrophobic properties or solubility problems which would not be encountered if they were to be contained within ~he entirety of the natural vWF
subunit, or were properly glycosylatad.
Of critical importance, therefore, to the synthesis of vWF-derived therapeutic polypeptides is the selection of conditions which minimize the formation of improper disulfide WO92/17192 PCT/~'S92/0~47~
2la7l~
contacts~ Prior expression of such polypeptides from recombinant DNA in host bacterial cells has certain disadvantages. With reference to the first embodiment, newly produced vWF polypeptides are unable to escape from the host cells, causing them to be accumulated within insoluble aggregates therein (inclusion bodies) where the effective concentration of cysteine residues was extremely high. Under these circumstances, disulfide bonds not characteristic of the vWF molecule as it naturally exists in the plasma are encouraged to, and do, form either within the inclusion bodies or during attempts to solubilize the polypeptide therefrom.
This embodiment provides a solution to these difficulties by causing the vWF-derived polypeptides to be expressed in mammalian cells using a DNA sequence which encodes the polypeptide and which also encodes ~or a signal peptide, the presence of which causes the vWF polypeptide to be secreted from the host cells. Incorrect disulfide bond formation is minimized by limiting the accumulation of high local concentrations of the polypeptide as in inclusion bodies.
In addition, enzymes present in the host eucaryotic cells, unlike bacteria, are able to glycosylate (add carbohydrate chains to~ the vWF-derived polypeptides resulting in therapeutic molecules which more closely resemble domains of vWF molecules derived from human plasma.
The recombinant 116 kg/mol polypeptide generated according to this invention is demonstrated to represent a dimer of the subunit fragment consisting of residues 441-730 and possesses an amount of glycosylation e~uivalent to that found in the comparable region of plasma-derived vWF.
There follows hereafter a description of the types of therapeutic vWF-derived polypeptides which have or may be generated according to the effective recombinan~ procedures of the second embodiment.

Recombinant vWF Polypeptides of the Second Embodiment Stated broadly, this second embodiment includes any fragment of mature von Willebrand subunit comprising that WO9~/17192 2 ~ CT/~S9~02~7 sequence of amino acids between approxima~ely residue 449 and approximately residue 728, or a subfragment thereof, from which at least one of cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 thereof is removed. Such removal reduces the tendency of the fragment to form undesired interchain disulfide bonds (and resultant dimers) with the result that therapeutic utility as an antithrombotic is improved.
A further aspect of the embodiment encompasses a glycosylated form of the above defined polypeptides.
In the design of antithrombotic polypeptides derived from the aforementioned region of vWF, it is preferred that cysteine residues be retained at positions 509 and 695 so that the tertiary structure of the GPIb(~) binding domain of the mature vWF subunit fragment is preserved.
Also preferred in the practice of the embodiment is a glycosylated polypeptide derived from the aforementioned region of vWF in which cysteine residues are retained at ; positions 509 and 695 and in which each of cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 is deleted or replaced by residues of other amino acids.
Additionally preferred in the practice of the embodiment is a glycosylated polypeptide derived from the aforementioned region of vWF in whioh cysteine residues are retained at positions 509 and 695 and in which any one of cysteine 25 residues 459, 462 and 464 is deleted or replaced by a single residue of another amino acid.
Important factors involved in the design of, or further modification to, the preferred mutant polypeptides ~antithrombotics) of the invention are described hereafter.
Potential binding sites for collagens and glycosamino-glycans (or proteoglycans) exist in the 449-728 tryptic fragment in the loop region between cysteine residues 509 and 695. In the event that binding at these sites by such macromolecules impairs the antithrombotic therapeutic utility of any of the recombinant polypeptides of the invention by, for example, also providing bridging to collagen, the polypeptide can be redesigned tfor example, by proteolysis, covalent labelling or mutagenesis) to delete or alter the loop region, or a subdomain thereof.

WO92/17192 PCT/~S92/0~47 S2,~ Q7 l ~a 36 It is known that both platelets and von Willebrand factor molecules contain large numbers of negative charges such as, for example, those contributed by sialic acid. Such charges can facilitate desirable mutual repulsion of the molecules under non-injury conditions. The addition of one or more positively charged residues of lysine and/or of arginine extending, ~or example, from the amino and/or from the carboxy terminus of the 52/48 tryptic: fragment or recombinant equivalents thereof can overcome electrical repulsions with respect to the GPIb(~) receptor, thus facilitating use of the fragment as an antithrombotic therapeutic.
In addition, and with respect to polypeptides patterned upon the 449-728 vWF subunit fragment, it is within the scope - 15 of the invention to remove certain cysteine residues by site directed mutagenesis and to thereafter inactivate any remaining cysteine residues by chemical inactivation thereof, such as, for example, by S-carboxymethylation.
The second embodiment is also concerned with the preparation o~ polypeptides which are useful in the treatment of hemorrhagic disease. Stated broadly, there is provided a process for the production by recombinant DNA-directed methods of a dimeric polypeptide substantially equivalent to the 116 kg/mol tryptic fragment derived from circulating vWF.
Z5 In accordance with the process, the monomeric fragment initially formed assumes a tertiary structure suitable for dimerization, and dimerization thereof is effected (see Example 7). In addition, the process conditions are such that it is possible to form a properly glycosylated dimeric polypeptide.
There follows hereafter a discussion of means by which polypeptides of the second embodiment can be prepared and, in particular, by which such polypeptides can be effectively secreted from host cells in proper folded form and possessing preferably only those disulfide bonds whose presence is consistent with therapeutic utility.

WO92/1719~ ~ ~ 0 7 ~$ ~/US92/0247 Prepara~ion of Mutant Polypeptides of the Second Embodiment - Construction of Suitable DNA Sequences and E~pression Plasmids Essential elements necessary for the practice of the embodiment are: (A) a DNA sequence which encodes the residue 449-728 domain of the mature vWF subunit; (B) an expression plasmid or viral expression vector capab]e of directing in a eucaryotic cell the expression therein of the aforementioned residue 449-728 domain; and (C) a eucaryotic host cell in which said expression may be effected.
The expression of the DNA sequence of the von Willebrand factor subunit fragment is facilitated by placing a eucaryotic consensus translation initiation sequence and a methionine initiation codon upstream (5') to the residue 449-728 encoding DNA. The vWF DNA sequence may be a cDNAsequence, or a genomic sequence such as, for example, may be produced by enzymatic amplification from a genomic clone in a polymerase chain reation. Expression of the residue 449-728 encoding se~uence is further facilitated by placing downstream therefrom a translation initiation codon such as TGA. The vWF-polypeptide so expressed typically remains within the host cells because of the lack of attachment to the nascent vWF polypeptide of a signal peptide. In such a situation, purification o~ proteins expressed therein and the extraction of pharmacologically useful quantities thereof are more difficult to accomplish than if the polypeptide were secreted into the culture medium of the host cells. Such expression systems are nonetheless useful for diagnostic assay purposes such as, for example, testing the proper function of platelet GPIb-IX receptor complexes in a patient.
In the preferred practice of the invention in which the polypeptide is secreted from the host cell, there is provided a vWF-encoding DNA sequence for insertion into a suitable host cell in which there is also inserted upstream from the residue 449-728 encoding sequence thereof a DNA sequence encoding the vWF signal peptide (see Example 7). Other vWF-encoding DNA sequences corresponding to different regions of the mature vWF subunit, or corresponding to the propeptide, or to combinations of any of such regions, may be similarly expressed by similarly placing them downstream from a vWF

WO92/l719~ PCT/US92/02~7~
210'7i00 38 signal peptide sequence in a suitable encoding DNA. When attached to the amino terminal end of the residue 449-728 fragment of the vWF subunit, the signal peptide causes the fragment to be recognized by cellular structures as a polypeptide of the kind to be processed for ultimate secretion from the cell, with concomitant cleavage of the signal polypeptide from the 449-728 fra~nent.
With respect to the construction of a eucaryotic expression system and the expression therein of the tryptic 52/48 kg/mol domain of mature subunit vWF (the residue 449-728 fragment), it has been found (see Example 7) to be conveneint to manipulate a slightly larger fragment represented by residues 441 (arginine) to 730 (asparagine).
Other similar fragments containing small regions of additional amino acids (besides the 449-728 residue sequence~, which additional amino acids do not significantly affect the function of said ~ragment, may also be expressed.
Similarly, functional fragments may be expressed from which, when compared to the 449-728 fragment, several residues adjacent to the amino and carboxy terminals have been removed ~s long as the GPIb(~) binding se~uences are not compromised.
It has also been found to be effective, with respect to the construction of a suitable DNA sequence for encoding and expressing the rssidue 441-730 fragment, to cause to be inserted between the ~NA encoding the carboxy terminus of the signal peptide and the cod~on for residue 441 codons for the first three amino acids of the vWF propeptide (alanine-glutamic acid-glycine) said codons being naturally found directly downstream (3') to the signal sequence in the human vWF gene.
A wide variety of expression plasmids or viral expression vectors are suitable for the expression of the residue 441-730 mature vWF subunit fragment or similar vWF
fra~ments. One factor of importance in selectins an expression system is the provision in the plasmid or vector of a high e~ficiency transcription promoter which is directly adjacent to the cloned vWF insert.

WO92/17192 ~ 'S92/0247 Another factor of importance in the selection of an expression plasmid or viral expression vector is the provision in the plasmid or vector of an antibiotic resistance gene marker so that, for example, continuous selection for stable transformant eucaryotic host cells can be applied.
Examples of plasmids suitable for use in the practice of the invention include pCDM8, pCDM8~, pCDNAl, pCDNAl~, pMA~P~
and Rc/CMV. Preferred plasmids include pCDM8~, pcDNAl~
pM~ and Rc/CMV.
Examples of viral expression vector systems suitable for the practice of the invention include those based upon retroviruses and those based upon baculovirus Autoqrapha californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus.
Representative host cells comprising permanent cell lines suitable for use in the practice of the invention include CHo-Kl Chinese hamster ovary cells, ATCC-CCL 61; COS-l cells, SV-40 transformed African Green monkey kidney, ATCC-CRL 1650; ATT 20 murine pituitary cells; RIN-5F rat pancreatic ~ cells; cultured insect cel}s, Spodoptera fruqiperda; or yeast ~Sarcomyces).
Example 7 contains a detailed explanation of preferred procedures used to express and secrete the 441-730 sequence.
In that Example, the fragment is secreted as a homodimer held together by one or more disulfide bonds involving cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464. Expression of monomeric fragments useful as antithrombo~ics necessitates control be made of the disulfide bonding abilities of the monomers which is achieved most preferably by mutagenesis procedures as described below.
Mutagenesis of vWF DNA Encoding The Mature_Suhunit Residue 449-728 Reaion A variety of molecular biological techniques are available which can be used to change cysteine codons for those of other amino acids. Suitable techniques include mutagenesis using a polymerase chain reaction, gapped-duplex mutagenesis, and differential hybridization of an oligonucleotide to DNA molecules differing at a single nucleotide position. For a review of sui~able codon altering techniques, see Kraik, C. "~se of Oligonucleotides for Site WO92/1719~ 2 ~ PCT/~'S92/0247~
~-Specific Mutagenesis", Biotechniques, Jan/Feb 1985 at page 12.
In the practice of this embodiment, it preferred to use the site-directed or site-specific mutagenesis procedure of Kunkel, T.A., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82, 488-492 (1985).
This procedure takes advantage of a series of steps which first produces, and then selects against, a uracil-containing DNA template. Example 1 of the present lnvention explains in detail the mutagenesis techniques used to create mutant vWF
cDNA.
Other publications which disclose site-directed mutagenesis procedures are: Giese, N.A. et al., Science, 236, 1315 (1987); U.S. Patent No. 4,518,584; and U.S. Patent No. 4,959,314.
It is also preferred in the practice of this embodiment to cause to be substituted for one or more of the cysteine codons of the wild type DNA se~uence codons for one or more o~ the following amino acids: alanine, threonine, serine, glycine, and asparagine. Replacement with alanine and 20 glycine codons is most preferred. The selection o~ a replacement for any particular codon is generally independent of the selection of a suitable replacement at any other po~ition.
The following are representative examples of the types of codon substitutions which can be made, using as an example cysteine residue 459:
(A) the codon for cysteine 459 could be replaced by a codon for glycine; or (B) the codon for cysteine 459 could he replaced by two or more codons such as one for serine and one ~or glycine, such replacement resulting in a new amino acid sequence: His458-Ser459(')-Gly4590-Gln~; or (C) the codon for cysteine 459 could be deleted from the cDNA, such deletion resulting in a shortened amino acid sequence represented by - - - His458-Gln4~- - -; or (D) one or more codons for residues adjacent to cysteine residue 459 could be deleted along with codon 459 as represented by - - r~lu4s7-Gln4~- -.

WO92/1719~ 7 ~ S92/02~7 It is contemplated that codons for amino acids other than alanine, threonine, serine, glycine or asparagine will also be useful in the practice of the invention depending on the particular primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary environment of the target cysteine residue.
It is considered desirable in the practice of this embodiment to provide as a replacement for any particular cysteine residue of the 449-728 tryptic vWF subunit fragment an amino acid which can be accommodated at the cysteine position with minimal perturbation of the secondary structure (such as ~-helical or ~-sheet) of the wild type amino acid sequence subsegment within which the~cysteine position is located. In the practice of the present invention, alanine, threonine, serine, glycine and asparagine will generally be satisfactory because they are, like cysteine, neutrally charged and have side chains which are small or relatively small in size.
Substantial research has been conducted on the subject of predicting within which types of structural domains of proteins (~-helix, ~-sheet, or random coil) one is most likely to find particular species of amino acids. Serine is a preferred amino acid for use in the practice of this invention because it most closely approximates the size and polarity of cysteine and is believed not to disrupt ~-helical and ~-sheet domains.
Reference, for example, to Chou, P.Y. et al., Biochemistry, 13(2), 211-222 (1974) and Chou, P.Y. et al., "Prediction of Protein Conformation,~ Biochemistry, l3(2), 222-244 (1974) provides further infor!mation useful in the selection of replacement amino acids. Chou, P.Y. et al.
predicted the secondary structure of specified polypeptide sequence segments based on rules for determining which species of amino acids therein are likely to be found in the center of, for example, an alpha helical region, and which residues thereof would be likely to terminate propagation of a helical zone, thus becoming a boundary residues or helix breakers. Accordiny to Chou, P.Y. et al., supra, at 223, cysteine and the group of threonine, serine, and asparagine are found to be indif~erent to ~-helical structure, as WO92/1719~ PCT/~S92/~247~
21071~0 42 opposed to being breakers or formers of such regions. Thus, threonine, serine and asparagine are likely to leave unperturbed an ~-helical region in which a potential target cysteine might be located. Similarly, glycine, alanine and serine were found to be more or less indifferent to the formation of ~-regions. It is noted that serine, threonine and asparagine residues represent possible new sites of glycosylation making them potentially unsuitable replacement residues at certain positions in secretory proteins subject to glycosylation.
Generally, the primary consideration which should be taken into account in connection with selecting suitable amino acid replacements is whether the contemplated substitution will have an adverse effect on the tertiary structure of the fragment. Thus, other amino acids may be suitable as acceptable substitutes for particular cysteine residues as long as the new residues do not introduce undesired changes in the tertiary structure of the 449-728 fragment. Reactivity with NMC-4 antibody is recommended as a test of whether a mutant polypeptide has the desired therapeutic properties.
The specific protocol used to generate the mutant vWF
residue 441-730 fragment containing cysteine to glycine substitutions at each of residue positions 459, 462 and 464 is described in Example 9. The expression plasmid used therein was designated pAD4/A3C.
The speci~ic protocol, adapted from that o~ Example 9, and which was used to generate the three mutant residue 441-730 fragments, each of which contains a different single Cys ~ Gly mutation (at positions 459, 462 or 464) is described in Example 14. The respective expression plasmids used therein were designated pAD4/G459, pAD4/G462 and pAD/G~ (collectively "the pAD4/alC plasmids").

Properties of the Polypeptides of the Second Embodiment Homodimeric l16 kg/mol vWF Fragments Example 7 below discloses the use of stably transformed CH0-Rl cells to express the unmutagenized residue 441-730 vWF
subunit fragment. As set forth in Example lO below, the W092/171~2 ~ t~ 92/0247 unmutagenized fragment was also expressed in unstable COS-1 transformants.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of secreted and immunoprecipitated proteins derived from CHO-Kl cells demonstrates that, under nonreducing conditlons, the dominant vWF-derived polypeptide, detected by staining with Coomassie blue, has an apparent molecular weight of about 116,000 (Example 7). This result was confirmed by characterizing the polypeptides secreted by pAD4/WT trans~ormed COS-l cells ~Examples 12-14) using autoradiographs of 35S-labelled proteins. Under disulfide-reducing conditions (such as in the presence of 100 mM dithiothreitol) the 116 kg/mol fragment was no longer detected and the vWF-derived material appears as the expected 52/48 kg/mol monomer.
The apparent molecular weight of the recombinant 116 kg/mol polypeptide was consistent with the presence of said polypeptide as a homodimer of the 4~1-730 fragment. This homodimer carries also an amount of glycosylation equivalent to that observed in the 116 kg/mol polypeptide isolated by tryptic digestion of mature plasma (circulating) vWF. It is thus demonstrated that expression of the 441-730 fragment in the mammalian cell cultures of this invention ~avors the formation of the disulfide-dependent 116 kg/mol dimer thereof, mimicking the structure seen in plasma. That the 116 kg/mol fragment so formed represents a correctly ~olded polypeptide was evidenced by its raaction (under nonreducing conditions) with conformation-dependent NMC-4 antibody. This antibody recognizes a properly assembled GPIb(~) binding site (~xample 7). Reactivity with NMC-4 disappears under reducing conditions.
The dimeric 116 kg/mol fragment which i5 within the scope of the present embodiment and which contains two GPIb(~) binding sites supports ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation by virtue of its bivalent character. ~his was evidenced in Example 8 below.
Since it was demonstrated in the first embodiment that cysteine residues 471 and 474 and also residues 509 and 695 are involved in intrachain bonds, the interchain bonds which stabilize ~he 116 kg/mol homodimer must be formed from one or WO92/17192 Pcr/us92/o247~
2 1 0 ~ 44 more of residues 459, 462 and 464. It is further noted that since residues 459, 462 and 464 are in such close proximity in any monomer, there may be variation as to which particular residue or residues contribute the interchain disulfide bond or bonds which form the interpolypeptide contact in any particular mature vWF dimer or multimer, or recombinant 116 kg/mol fragment. Therapeutically-active populations of dimeric molecules can be generated according to the practice of the invention utilizing any of the possible combinations of interchain disulfide bonds. It is noted that it is also possible that some structural folding or disulfide bond formation associated with the generation of therapeutically active conformations of the recombinant 116 kg/mol dimers of the invention, or disulfide exchange therein, occurs after the polypeptides are secreted from a host cell.
Since there are also contained within the 441-730 vWF
~ragment potential binding sites for collagens, proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans, the 116 kg/mol polypeptide is capable of performing a bridging function between a platelet and the subendothelium. This enables it to be used in a method for inducing platelet adhesion to surfaces such as, for example, vascular subendothelium. There is also provided a method of inducing platelet activation and/or aggregation which comprises contacting platelets with an effective amount of the recombinant 116 kg/mol polypeptide.
It is noted that as long as at least one of the one or more potential interchain disulfide bonds stabilizing the homodimer is left intact, and the amino acid sequences comprising the two GPIb(~) binding sites are preserved, that other regions of one or more of the two monomeric fragments thereof could be deleted, if necessary, to modify the therapeutic properties of the dimer.

52/48 kglmol monomeric vWF fraqments An important aspect of the second embodiment of the invention is the provision of glycosylated 52/48 kg/mol monomeric fragments of the vWF subunit having substantial elements of normal tertiary structure. Such fragments have a WO 92/17192 1 . PCr/1 'S92/02~7 ~
2 ~ q ~

reduced tendency to form dimers which tend to be unsuitable for use as antithrombotic therapeutics.
Following the above described procedures for site directed mutagenesis, residue 441-730 vWF fragments were produced in which one or more of cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 were replaced with glycine residues. Examples 9, 10 and 11 below explain the mutagenesis and cell culture conditions necessary to create COS-l cell transformants expressing these mutant vWF polypeptides. Examples 6 to 8 of the invention describe the properties of the molecules so derived in comparison with the recombinant 116 kglmol polypeptide produced from pAD4/WT transformed COS-1 cells.
The vWF-derived polypeptides expressed by pAD4/~3C
transformed COS-1 cells (containing the vWF 441~730 DNA
se~uence, but with each of cysteine codons 459, 462 and 464 thereof replaced by single glycine codons) were compared with the polypeptides secreted by pAD~/WT transformed COS-1 cells.
To perform the comparisons, 35S-methionine-supplemented culture medium ~rom each culture was sub~ected to immunoprecipitation using equal amounts of NMC-4 and RG-46 anti-vWF antibodies (Example 6) to collect the vWF-derived secreted proteins. The immunoprecipitated vWF polypeptides were then resolved by autoradiography of 35S-label on SDS
po~yacrylamide gels. No 116 kg/mol polypeptide could be detected in culture extracts of pAD4/ 3C transformed cells under nonreducing conditions. Instead, under either reducing or nonreducing conditions,~a band having an apparent molecular weight of 52 kgtmol was seen. In contrast, the pAD4/WT transformed COS-1 cells produce under nonreducing conditions, as expected, a polypeptide of apparent molecular weight of 116 kg/mol.
The immunoprecipitation procedure was also repeated using only conformation-dependent NMC-4 antibody (Example 13). The major vWF-derived component isolated ~rom the culture medium of pAD4/WT transformed cells again had an apparent molecular weight of 116 kg/mol under nonreducing conditions and 52 kg/mol under reducing conditions. A band of apparent 52 kg/mol molecular weight was detected under nonreducing conditions on gels of pAD4/~3C derived WO9~/1719' PCT/US92/0247 2 107 10 ~ 46 polypeptide material. As described in Example 13, reactivity with NMC-4 antibody is important evidence that the 52 kg/mol fragment detected in pAD~/~3C transformed cells possesses the tertiary structure of the natural residue 441-730 domain.

The immunoprecipitatlon procedure was also used to detect NMC-4 reactive vWF polypeptide prot~uced by pAD4/Alc transformed COS-1 cells cultured under conditions similar to those for pAD4/WT and ~3C transformants in the presence of 35S
methionine. Immunoprecipitated proteins were run under reducing and nonreducing conditions in SDS-polyacrylamide gels and compared with vWF polypeptides produced by pAD4/WT
and pAD4/~3C transformants (Example 14).
It was revealed that substitution of any one of cysteine residues 459, 462 or 464 by glycine results predominantly in a polypeptide having an apparent molecular weight of 52 kg/mol under nonreducing or reducing conditions, the ~ormation of the 116 kg/mol species having been prevented.
~ he apparent molecular weight of 52 kg/mol for recombinant polypeptides derived from COS-1 cells transformed with either pAD4/~3C or pAD4/a1C plasmids is consistent with said-polypeptides being monomers of the 441-730 ~ragment, while carrying also an amount of glycosylation equivalent to that seen in the 52 kg/mol polypeptide as isolated from tryptic digestion and reduction of mature plasma (circulating) vWF.
Unlike the dimeric pQlypeptides of apparent 116 kg/mol molecular weight, the monomeric 52 kg/mol polypeptides produced by pAD4/~lC and pAD4/~3C plasmids are unlikely to be capable of the bridging function associated with the dimer.
Accordingly, there is provided a method of preventing platelet activation and/or aggregation which comprises contacting platelets with an effective amount of a mutant recombinant 52/48 kg/mol polypeptide which polypeptide shows at least a substantially reduced tendency to dimerizP when compared with nonmutant (wild type) recombinant 52/48 kg/mol polypeptides.
There is further provided a method of prsventing the adhesion of platelets to surfaces which comprises contacting .

, ..

WO92/1719~ 2 ~ s92/o247 platelets with an effective amount of a mutant recombinant 52/48 kg/mol polypeptide which shows at least a substantially reduced tendency to dimerize when compared with nonmutant recombinant 52/48 kg/mol polypeptides.
Contained within the 441-730 vWF fragment are potential binding sites for collagen (approximately residues 542-622) and glycosaminoalycans and proteoglycans (also within the residue 509-695 disulfide loop), in addition to the GPIb~
binding sites. It is probable because of steric considerations that a single residue 441-730 ~ragment could not perform effectively as a bridging, potentially thrombotic, molecule. It is noted, however, that as long as the GPIb(~) binding domain of the 52/~8 kg/mol monomer (consisting of approximately the primary sequence regions 47~-488 and 694-708, and a tertiary domain thereof contributed in part by the 509-695 disulfide bond) is preserved, other regions (part of the heparin and collagen binding loop) of the said 52/48 kg/mol monomeric fragment could be deleted or altered, such as by proteolysis or by mutagenesis, if necessary, to modify or preserve the antithrombotic therapeutic properties thereof.
It is also possible that some structural folding or disulfide bond formation associa-ted with the generation of therapeutically active conformations of the recombinant 52/48 kg/mol monomers of the invention, or disulfide exchange therein, occurs after the polypeptides are secreted from a host cell.
The Present ~Third) Embodiment Descri~tlon of the Embodiments of the Present Invention This embodiment of the invention provides for antithrombotic polypeptides patterned on mature von Willebrand factor and fragments thereof. Stated more precisely, this embodiment of the invention reflects the discovery that certain mutant polypeptides patterned on mature von Willebrand factor and capable of enhanced binding (relative to wild type) to specific receptors or ligands of vWF can be used to inhibit binding by native or wild type vWF
to the same receptors or ligands thereby preventing or WO92/17192 PCT/US92/0247~
'~107~ 48 inhibiting thrombosis. The mutant vWF polypeptides having antithrombotic activity can be expressed from recombinant bacterial or eucaryotic expression systems.
A principal goal of the invention is to modify von Willebrand factor or fragments thereof by, for example, mutation or covalent labelling so that the vWF-derived polypeptides bind to one or more receptors (ligands) with a greater affinity than the comparable sequence of amino acids present in wild type vWF, or in the equivalent fragment thereof. Provision of such polypeptides having an "increased binding affinity" allows for more effective clinical treatments including the provision of an effective dose by a lower concentration of therapeutic, with the result that adverse clinical consequences such as immune response are minimized. For the purpose of the invention, a binding affinity is considered increased if the modification enhances the therapeutic utility of the polypeptide by either (l) increasing the affinity of the vWF-derived polypeptide for a ligand by about 10% in relation to the comparable wild-type sequence and as measured in a suitable in vitro or in vivo assay, or (2) achieving an equivalent amount of binding to a ligand with about 10% less polypeptide; or (3) with respect to a particular amino acid sequence modification, achieving (l) or (2) above by use of the said modification in combination with one or more other "modifications" to the amino acid sequence as that term was aboYe defined. More preferably, therapeutics of the invention have an increased binding af~inity of about 100% or more for a ligand and most preferably an increased binding affinity for a ligand, compared to the wild type sequence, of about 5 fold or higher.
In the preferred practice of the invention, the mutant polypeptides are designed to have only one binding function, that is, they are capable of binding to only one receptor or ligand, thereby praventing a bridging function in which two or more components which participate in the hemostatic process such as, for example, platelets and damaged vas;cular wall tissue, are joined, potentially initiating an unwanted thrombus. Methods are described below whereby such WO 92/17192 2 ~ ~ 7 A &~ S92/02~7 ` 49 additional binding functions can be avoided. The preferred receptor or ligand of the mutant vWF polypeptides is platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib~.
Preferred as clinically useful antithrombotic polypeptides are those polypeptides patterned upon the mature von Willebrand factor subunit amino acid 3equence between approximately residue 441 and approximately residue 733, or subfragments thereof, and having, relative to the wild type amino acid sequence of said polypeptide, or of a subfragment thereof, an enhanced affinity for platelet glycoprotein Ib~.
Additionally preferred are vWF-derived polypeptides having a similarly enhanced affinity for platelet glycoprotein Iba encompassing all or part of the mature subunit residue 441-733 se~uence and containing additional vWF polypeptide sequence.
Although vWF polypeptide fragments reflecting wild type vWF sequences can be used to effect inhibition of the binding of vWF to platelet GPIb~ receptors in patients, it is desirable to identify polypeptides haviny enhanced affinity for GPIb which are therefore effective at lower doses.
As will be described in detail, an important aspect of the invention is the recognition that certain amino acid substitutions, additions or deletions (compared to the wild type vWF sequence) can be made in the polypeptides to enhance their affinity for GPIb~, thereby making them more effective when administered in therapeutic compositions.
A principal discovery~of the invention is t~at such suitable amino acid substitutions, additions, or deletions are reflected in, or are suggested by, the amino acid se~uences of mature vWF subunit as derived from patients afflicted with Type II~ of von Willebrand disease, said amino acid sequence mutations being responsible for the affliction which is mani~ested by a prolonged bleeding time after injury.
As stated in Ruggeri, Z.M. and Zimmerman, T.S., Blood, 70(4), 895-904 (1987) at 896, "the term von Willebrand disease (vWD) defines a bleeding disorder that is heterogenous in its modalities of genetic transmission, clinical and laboratory manifestations, and underlying W092/1719' PCT/US92/0247~
21~7~ 50 pathogenic mechanisms. common to the different forms of the disease is that they all represent a genetic disorder, transmitted in an autosomal manner, which alters the structure, functions or concentration of vWF." Numerous separate types and subtypes of vWD have been determined based on phenotypic characteristics of the respective proteins.
Of particular interest to the practice of the invention is that variant of von Willebrand disease known as Type IIB, the criteria for diagnosis thereof being provided by Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., N. Enql. J. of Med.~ 302, 1047-1051 ~1980).
These criteria include a lifelong bleeding tendency, absence of large vWF multimers circulating in plasma, and platelet aggregation which is hyperresponsive to ristocetin, i.e., occuring with lower ri~tocetin concentrations than are needed to induce aggregation in platelet-rich plasma of normal individuals. Purified Type IIB vWF has an increased affinity for platelets and, unlike vWF from normal individuals, binds in vitro to platelet GPIb~ in the absence of any modulating substance. See Berkowitz, S.D. et al., in Coaqulation and ~leedinq Disorders, von Willebrand Disease, Chapter 12, Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York (1989). It is characteristic of normal vWF under similar circumstances that it not bind to platelets in the absence of an added helper molecule ~a modulator) such as ristocetin or botrocetin. It should be emphasized that normally circulating plasma VWF and platelets do not interact, absent some physical or chemical stimulus indicating damage to the vascular system. It is believed that modulators used in in vitro assays fulfill the function oE such an in vivo stimulus.
This invention recognizes the significance of the greater IIB-type affinity for platelet receptors, which can be demonstrated in the presence and/or in the absence of modlllators (see Examples 18-19 and 23-24 below), the mutations responsible therefor being used to design therapeutic vWF fragments reflective of said mutations and having enhanced antithrombotic utility.
As further evidence of the significance of these mutations, patients afflicted with Type IIB von Willebrand disease typically exhibit thrombocytopencia (a reduction in WO92~17192 P~T/~'S92/02~7 the number o~ circulating functional platelets) which is thought, Holmberg, L. et al., N. Enql. 3. Med., 309, 816-821 (1983), to result from intravascular platelet clumping initiated by the binding of Type IIB vWF molecules to the platelets. Platelets if so aggregated may be transiently removed from circulation leaving the patient with inadequate levels of functional platelets and less able to form clots in the event of vascular injury.
Accordingly, this invention provides for vWF-derived polypeptides which are designed to incorporate mutations associated with Type IIB vWD phenotype and have therefore, relative to the wild type sequence, an enhanced ability to bind to platelet GPIb~ receptors. By occupying said GPIb~
receptor site, the polypeptides demonstrate antithrombotic utility, that is, they prevent platelets from participating in the processes which under normal or pathological circumstances lead to thrombus formation. Representative of processes involved in thrombus formation and which can be inhibited by the polypeptides of the invention are platelet adhesion, activation and aggregation.
It is important to note that viewed from the perspective of designing new antithrombotic therapeutizs, the important characteristic of the new polypeptides is an enhanced affinity for GPIb~ receptor, irrespective of whether the mutation is reflected in one or more particular IIB patients.
For the purposes of identifying or creating such therapeutic polypeptides the terms "IIB-like", "IIB phenotype", "reflective of Type IIB vWF", "IIB-like properties", and the like, refer to enhanced binding of GPIb~. The methods described below are useful in the identification or creation of such other, additional polypeptide sequences. In addition, and as described in Example 16 below, Type IIB
mutations or IIb-like mutations can be incorporated into vWF, or fragments thereof, thereby providing enhanced a~finity for GPIb~ even though said mutant amino acid residues are not inserted into the polypeptide at the exact equivalent se~uence positions that the mutations occupy in the vWF from particular patients. It is understood that all such W~92/1719~ PCT/US92/02~7~
2~37~0 52 resulting polypeptides having similar functional properties are within the scope of the invention.
In the preferred practice of the invention, the aforementioned antithrombotic polypeptides are made by a process of genetic engineering (recombinant DNA technology) which involves transferring into vWF-encodinq DNA that coding information which causes the resultant expressed polypeptide to contain one or more amino acid substitutions reflective of vWF as isolated from one or more patients with Type IIB
disease. The types of amino acid mutations useful in the design of said polypeptides and additional effective amino acid substitutions, additions or deletions are described below.
An additional aspect of the invention provides for the chemical modification or inactivation of a side chain or one or more amino acids in a vWF-derived polypeptide reflective of wild type vWF leading to a polypeptide expressing the vWD
Type IIB phenotype.
As a result of the characterization of the functional Z0 properties of the polypeptides resultant from the practice of this embodiment of the invention, there is also provided an explanation, with respect to particular patients, for the molecular basis of Type IIB disea~e.
Example 15 of the invention provides procedures representative of those which may be used to identify the particular mutations in mature von Willebrand factor which are responsible, in particular patients, for Type IIB von Willebrand disease. One propositus was determined to have a Trp550~Cys550 mutation. A second propositus was determined to have an Arg5~Trp5~l mutation. A third propositus having certain Type IIB-like symptoms (see Example 16, method 2 thereof) was determined to have a Gly56~Asp56~ mutation. In a separate published study with respect to two other patients, the mutations believed responsible for Type IIB phenotype were identified as Arg~3~Trp543 and Val553~Met553. Cooney, K.A.
et al., Blood, 76(supp. 1), abstract 1661, page 418a, Nov.
15, 1990.
It is noted that although all of the known Type IIB
mutations arP determined from the residue 509-695 loop region WO92/17i9~ ,J~ F~'S92/02 of the 52/4~ kg/mol tryptic fragment or vWF, additional patients may come to be identified for whom the responsible mutations are positioned outside the residue 509-695 loop or outside of the residue 441-730 fragment itself. Example 15 provides for methods suitable to analyze also DNA encoding mature vWF subunit sequence(s) outside of the above~indicated domains thereof. The invention also provides for therapeutic vWF-derived polypeptides that are designed to incorporate one or more of such other potential mutations.
It was demonstrated in the first and second embodiments of the invention that the interaction of the vWF fragment comprising approximately residues 441-730 with platelet GPIb~
involves 'lactual binding regions or sequences" (residues 474-488 and 69~-708 thereof) supported in the tertiary structure of the fragment by a disulfide stabilized loop which modulates the position and therefore the activity of the actual binding regions. These sequences and the loop are believed responsible for the adhesion of multisubunit vWF to platelets at GPIb~ sites. It may be determined, however, that additional amino acid seguences also participate in binding to GPIb~ or in the modulation of said binding.
It was noted above that soluble plasma vWF and platelets circulate in the blood without interacting with each other in normal individuals unless stimulated by one or more vascular injury-related signals. It is suggested therefore that proper exposure of the actual GPIb~ binding sites in vWF, and the regulation thereof, require particular conformation(s) of adjacent structural regions of vWF including the residue 509-695 sequence. Changes in conformation (such as in, adjacent to, or caused by the disulfide-stabilized loop) are believed necessary to facilitate the participation of vWF in hemostasis and thrombosis by inducing binding to GPIb~.
These changes in conformation are further believed to be subject to regulation, in vivo, and can be mimicked, in vitro, by inserting into the loop or other applicable regions of the mature subunit, or of a fragment of either, one or more mutant amino acid substitutions as determined from Type IIB patients. It is anticipated that certain other mutations conferring Type IIB properties may function in different ways WO92/1719~ PCT/USs2/02~7~
~107~ 54 to achieve the Type II8 phenotype but may be nonetheless transferred into therapeutic polypeptides according to the representative procedures of the invention (see Examples 17-18, 21-22). It is also representative of the practice of the invention to identify mutations in other types or subtypes of von Willebrand disease such as Type I (New York), which result in enhanced affinity for GPIb~ and which may be incorporated into antithrombotic therapeutic polypeptides.
As elaborated below, understanding the function of these substitutions or of the amino acids replaced thereby enables the provision of further amino acid changes providing equivalent or improved IIB~ e functional properties.
With respect to the invention of additional vWF-derived polypeptides having antithrombotic utility and exhibiting ln vitro or in vivo properties similar to polypeptides as derived from patients with Type IIB disease, the following is of particular significance. Methods l to 4 of Example 16 provide representative techniques for the identification of potential amino acid substitutions which although not identified from a particular Type IIB patient, confer nonetheless Type IIB-like properties on recombinantly produced vWF-derived polypeptides incorporating same. The above methods are also representative of techniques which can be used to identify proposed amino acid changes in the vWF
polypeptide sequence which effect an increased affinity for GPIb~ and which do not correspond with any known human vWF
sequence.
(A) The technique of random mutagenesis, Hutahison, C.A. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 83, 710-7l4 ~1986) can be used to generate a mature vWF (or mature vWF fragment) encoding D~A with random codon changes. By sequentially focusing on consecutive series of lO to 20 codons from which mutant series are generated, individual vWF-derived polypeptides containing one or more random mutations in the loop region, or other target regions can be generated.
Assay systems, suitable for screening large numbers of individual bacterial clones to identify those expressing polypeptide having enhanced binding WO92/17192 ~ CT/~IS~2/02~7~

affinlty for GPIb~ are also described in Example 16.
(B~ An additional method whereby IIB-like polypeptides tor other vWF-derived polypeptides having enhanced binding affinity for GPIb~) can be identified results from the observations that two of the five Xnown IIB mutations (511, 543) involve Arg~Trp substitutions, that presently all known mutations are within the region of approximately residue 510 to approximately residue 570 and that the region contains numerous other amino acid residues bearing positive charges at physiological pH, substitution for which by one or more neutral or negatively charged residues is hereby postulated to disrupt the proper in vivo function of the loop region, including thereby the function of preventiny interaction of GPIb~ and vWF until some stimulus or signal related to vascular injury causes a conformational change in vWF or in GPIb~ permitting their interaction.
(C) Additional broadly applicable strategies are provided in Method 4 of Example 16 (using Ar~ as a representative example) which reflect the idea that once a particular mutation is identified at a particular position in the amino acid seguence of a patient's vWF gene and it is determined by way of functional studies that the mutation confers or helps to confer the Type IIB phenotype, a significant number of further equivalent (or more effective) amino acid changes at or near that site become possible. Indentification (screening) and confirmation of the effects of such further amino acid changes in vWF-derived polypeptides are possible utilizing, for example, the representative mutagenesis strategies of Examples 16-lB, 21-22 below to incorporate such mutations, and then the screening systems of Example 16 to prove or determine th2 utility thereof (see the section of Example 16 entitled "Screening of mutant vWF-WO92/1719~ PCT/~IS92/02~7~

derived polypeptides for enhanced GPIb~ binding activity").
If, for example, it is determined that positive charge at one or more of residue positions 511, 524, 534, 543, 545, 552, 563, 571, 573, 578, or 579 is necessary for or facilitates normal function of the loop region, and that th~ absence thereof may con~er Type IIB-like properties, then it may be determined that a significant number of other effective and related amino acicl sequence permutations can be made surrounding the above-mentioned residue position(s). Representative of such a permutation strategy is the following.
Positive charge reduction and resultant IIB-like activity may be accomplished using substitution of various neutral residues or of residues possessing negative charge at physiological pH. According to the practice of the invention, and using Arg~3~Trp~3 as an example, since the effecting of a net change . in charge of (-l) may explain the conferring of IIB-like properties at this particular position, making additional, or different substitutions~ or additions of other negatively charged or neutral residues may provide an equivalent enhanced GPIb~
binding effect. Alternately, proximal and positively charged Arg~5 could be deleted or substituted for. Parallel arguments apply to any negatively charged residue positions of wild type vWF determined by comparison with vWF from Type IIB
patients to be necessary for proper in vivo function.
The following manipulations resulting in modified amino acid sequences are also within the practicP
of the invention as are also other similar or equivalent manipulations which would readily occur to practitioners of the biochemical art: (l) replacement of a residue which provides a particular hydrogen bond or provides a particular hydrophobic contact with a residue incapable of W092/17192 PCT/~'S92/0247 57 ~ 4~
forming such a bond or contact, and (2) chemical inastivation by covalent labelling of one or more residues of wild type vWF amino acid sequence (such as of Arg5~) using a covalent label which produces the same change in functional behavior as any of the aforementioned mutations.
(D) It is also contemplated that any of the above strategies can be used in any combination thereof so that, for example, one or more mutations from the vWF gene of one Type IIB vWD patient could be incorporated into a DNA encoding a vWF-derived therapeutic polypeptide along with one or more mutations from the DNA of another such patient, or along with one or more mutations not derived from a patient but predicted or determined in a vWF-derived polypeptide to confer Type IIB-like properties. Similarly, more than one such predicted or determined mutation can be combined in an encoding VNA for expression therefrom of a therapeutic polypeptide.
(E) It should be noted that following the random mutagenesis and screening strategy of Example 16, or of such other mutation and screening strategies as are well known to practitioners of the biochemical art, other vWF-derived fragments having enhanced GPIb~ binding ability, but not characteristic o~f all aspects of Type IIB disease-phenotype, can be generated which reflect mutations that are nonetheless in the residue 509-695 region.
Other mutations conferring antithrombotic therapeutic utility may also, of course, be reflective of mutations in the "actual binding regions or sequences" for GPIb~.

Preparation and testing of the polvpe~tides of the invention_ There follows hereafter (and in Examples 15-24) a discussion of means by which the antithrombotic polypeptides of the present invention can be prepared and their utility W092/17192 PCT~US92/0247 2 ~7 ~oa 58 confirmed. In this regard the teachings of the first and second embodiments of the invention (including Examples l to 14 thereof) are particularly useful and it is suggested that frequent reference thereto be made. By way of example, the following teachings of those embodiments are noted:
elucidation of the roles of certain cysteine residues of mature von Willebrand factor subunit and the manipulation of said residue positions to design therapeutic polypeptidPs, the preparation of vWF fragments having elements of tsrtiary structure conferred by one or more disulfide bonds reflective of the equivalent structure as present in circulating vWF and also the preparation of vWF fragments lacking such elements, - and the preparation, replication and expression of DNA
sequences encoding vWF, or mutant polypeptides derived from vWF, or of fragments of either, and the structure, properties and therapeutic function of the vWF-derived polypeptides reported in the said e~bodiments including the potential utility of glycosylation thereof.
Examples 15-24 of the invention are representative of procedures useful in the practice of the invention, including those for the preparation of DNA sequences from which can be expressed the polypeptides of the invention, and those whereby the utility of said polypeptides as antithrombotic therapeutics can be demonstrated. Other suitable procedures known to those skilled in the art may be substituted if necessary and as the context requires.
Antihemorrhagic polypeptides derived ~rom the ~olypeptides of the invention The aforementioned second embodiment of the invention relates to the production by recombinant DNA technology o~
116 kg/mol homodimers of the mature vWF subuni~ residue 441-730 fragment.
Reference to Figure 2 demonstrates that dimerization of the 441-730 fragment involves one or more disulfide bonds of cysteine residues 459, 462, and 464.
An additional aspect of the invention is the recognition that certain amino acid substitutions, additions or deletions, which in the context of a monomeric fragment (such as 52/48 kg/mol fragment) have antithrombotic utility, have .

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7~
59 ~ '3 instead antihemorrhagic utility when incorporated into a dimeric fraqment (such as the 116 kg/mol fragment).
Accordingly, such mutations may be incorporated into a DNA
sequence in a host eucaryotic cell which encodes the residue 441-730 fragment, with resultant expression therefrom (following the procedure of Example 7) of a dimeric fragment having enhanced binding affinity for GPIb~ and enhanced (relative to wild type) antihemorrhagic activity. It is important to note that, in order to have therapeutic utility, such mutations must result in a fragment which does not bind to platelet GPIb~ receptors while in solution, but binds only when the vWF fragment has adhered to a surface, mimic]cing thereby the changes in vWF structure which result from binding, for example, to the subendothelium. Clone screening assays designed to employing surface bound vWF fragments are accordingly required.
With respect to amino acid changes suitable for producing monomeric fragments having enhanced GPIb~ binding affinity, and therefore antithrombotic activity, it is noted that all such strategies ~including covalent modification of particular amino acid residues) are suitable for generating antihemorrhagic dimers having enhanced GPIb~ affinity.
Covalent modifications may of course be applied to 116 kg/mol fragments produced by tryptic digestion.
Examples 7, 8 and 16 below, and the preceding discussion thereof, contain representative methods which can be used to produce and screen amino acid changes in the context of dimeric vWF fragments having enhanced antihemorrhagic activity. Other suitable procedures are generally known in the art.

Additional Bindina Functions ; Although the invention is initially described in terms of constructing therapeutically active fragments of mature vWF subunit patterned upon the residue 441-730 domain thereof and ha~ing enhanced affinity for platelet GPIb~ receptor, the multivalent character of circulating vWF, and the multiple potential ~unctions of each mature subunit provide a unique i wos2/l7l9~ PCT/~S92/02~7~
21~7~ ~ 60 ~
opportunity to design other fragments of vWF having additional enhanced antithrombotic properties.
A review of the particular functions of specific binding domains in mature vWF is provided in zimmerman, T.S. and Ruggeri, Z.M. Coagulation and Bleedin~ Disorders, Marcel Dekker, New York, 1989. Particular functional domains of mature vWF subunit having identified binding functions are as follows: (A) residues 1744-1747 (Arg Gly Asp Ser - see SEQ ID
NO: 2) of the C02H terminal region of the subunit are responsible for platelet glycoprotein IIbtIIIa binding; (B) two independent binding sites for collagen within or comprising approximately residue sequences 542-622 and 948-998; (C) a binding domain for coagulation Factor VIIIc between or comprising mature vWF subunit residues 1 to 272;
(D) binding domains for glycosaminoglycans (and proteoglycans) localized to the residue 1-272 region and also within the residue 509-695 region of the mature subunit; and (E) the above described platelet glycoprotein Ib~ binding domain.
By generating a population of randomly mutagenized DNA
sequences corresponding to one of the above binding domains of vWF and then screening the expressed polypeptides produced by resultant individual clones, appropriately sized inhibitor polypeptides with enhanced binding activity toward one of the above specified ligands or receptors may be derived. It is noted that this procedure is also applicable to additional binding domains of vWF for the same or different ligands or receptors that may come to be determined. The mutagenesis procedure is equally applicable to those of the above binding functions of vWF which may be shown to involve participation of two or more primary sequence regions of one or more mature vWF subunits which assemble to form a combined total binding domain.
Of particular importance as a source of new anti-thrombotics is the 52/48 kg/mol tryptic fragment which hasmultiple potential ligand or receptor binding functions.
Reference to Figure 2 shows that the homodimeric 116 kg/mol fragment (a dimer of the residue 441-730 fragment held together by one or more disulfide bonds at positions 459, WO~2/1719' ~ PCT/~'S92/02~7~

462, 464) can be used to cause adhesion or aggreqation of platelets and therefore has antihemorrhagic utility, whereas 52/48 kg/mol monomers thereof stabilized against interchain disulfide bond formation are capable of binding to a target ligand or receptor to the exclusion of multimeric vWF and therefore have utility as antithrombotics. If particular circumstances are identified, however, wherein the function of one binding site within the 5?/48 kg/mol fragment can be affected adversely by engagement at another binding site thereof of an additional ligand or receptor resulting in undesireable binding properties, the fragment can be further mutated or chemically altered to inactivate the particular undesired binding activity.
It was mentioned previously that random mutagenesis procedures, for example those of Hutchison, C.A. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 83,710-714 (1986) could be used to generate a population of DNA sequences encoding the 52/48 vWF fragment with random amino acid substitutions therein.
As further provided in Example 16 below, such individual resultant DNA sequences (each contained preferably within a bacterial clone) can be expressed and subie~ted to a large scale screening system designed to detect those species among the expressed vWF polypeptides which have enhanced binding activity (higher affinity) toward the platelet GPIb~
receptor, said enhancement resulting either from one or more mutations in the actual GPIba binding sequences (consisting approximately of residues 474-488 and 694-708), or within sequences (such as in thè case of known Type IIB mutations) which modulate the properties of the actual binding sequences.
Antithrombotic polypeptides which are monomeric and which are unable to perform a potentially thrombotic bridging function may also be designed to target the collagen fibers such as are exposed at the site of disease-caused circulatory system lesions, and upon which a thrombus may otherwise form.
By occupying these collagen binding sites, to the exclusion of multimeric vWF, the complex sequence of events resulting in platelet aggregation and thrombus formation can be avoided.

W092/1~9~ 2 ~ ~ 7 ~ ~ O 6~ PCT/~'S9~/02~7~

The random mutagenesis procedure of Hutchison, C.A. et al., supra, may be used to target the collagen binding domain within the loop of the 52/48 kg/mol vWF fragment. Suitable clones expressing polypeptides with enhanced binding activity toward collagen may be screened according to the procedure of Example 25. With respect to the design of such an antithrombotic 52/48 kg/mol polypeptide having a high binding affinity for collagen sites, it may be desireable to cause substitution or deletion (by mutation) or inactivation ~by chemical labelling or proteolysis) of the actual GPIb~
binding sequences in order to prevent a potentially thrombotic bridging activity within the monomeric 52/48 kg/mol fragment.
A particularly important benefit of the invention, and of the Second Embodiment thereof (see Examples g and 11), is the provision of a 52/48 kg/mol vWF fragment which has a substantially reduced tendency to participate in disulfide-induced dimerization; it therefore lacks potentially thrombotic bridging activity.
An additional collagen binding site is represented by the A3 domain of the mature vWF subunit. This domain comprises approximately residues 910-1100 o~ the subunit and contains also a disulfide loop formed by cysteine residues 921 and 1108. The A3 domain is believed to represent a partially autonomous structural domain containing within its primary amino acid sequence information adequate to allow assembly of a polypeptide patterned thereon into a structure mimicing in whole or part the natural tertiary structure of the A3 domain as present in multimeric vWF. The A3 domain itself lacks additional cysteines, analogous, ~or example, to cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 positioned adjacent to the Al domain, and which would tend to cause dimerization of the fragment. Thus the A3 domain is a region from which to derive effective antithrombotics.
As an example of the procedure used to express mutant polypeptides which target exposed collagen fibers of the subendothelium and representative o~ the mutagenesis strategy used to target any other of the above-mentioned macromolecules of the hemostatic mechanism, a DNA sequence WO92/1719~ PCT/~IS92/0247 corresponding to the A3 domain may be prepared by any of several standard methods bas~d upon the known vWF gene sequence, the location of exon/intron boundaries therein, the nucleotide sequence of available vWF mRNA or cDNA and the known amino acid sequence of pre-pro-vWF. A vWF mRNA could be used, for example, as a template for reverse transcriptase with the resultant cDNA being subjected to a polymerase chain reaction using suitable oligonucleotide primers to flank the ends of the target A3 encoding r~gion. ~ nucleotide sequenc~
sufficiently large to facilitate efficient replication, transcription and translation (such as corresponding to amino acid positions 850-1150) can be chosen for amplification with random mutagenesis, Hutchisonj C.A. et al., supra, applied to emphasize permutation of the DNA region encoding amino acid 15 residues 948-998. Screening of clones expressing the randomly mutagenized population of polypeptide sequences for particular species demonstrating enhanced collagen binding activity would follow the method of Example 27.
Bindinq Sites for Glvcosaminoqlycans and Proteoqlycans Bacterial clones possessing mutagenized DNA sequences corresponding to the "heparin binding sites" of the mature vWF subunit tbelieved to be positioned in whole or part within the loop of the 52/48 kg/mol fragment and also in whole or part within the mature subunit region represented by residues 1-272) may be similarly generated and screened for the necessary enhanced binding affinity toward their respective target macromolecules to create antithrombotic therapeutic polypeptides. The screening procedure follows the procedure of Examples 26 and 29.
The "heparin-binding domains" of vWF may prove to be instrumental in the binding of vWF to exposed subendothelium in response to vascular injury and in the pathogenesis of vascular disease. It has been shown that vWF binds to endothelial cell-produced extracellular matrices even after collagen has been enzymatically digested away. It is likely that proteoglycans are responsible for this interaction.

WOs2/17192 PCT/~'S92/~2~7~
~ a ~ 64 The ~latelet qlycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor slte Although the binding reaction believed primarily responsible for crosslinklng (aggregation) of individual platelets that have adhered to the subendotheliu~ at the site of vascular injury is the bridging of platelet GPIIbjIIIa receptor sites by fibrinogen, multimeric vWF can also contribute to this crosslinking activity. Suitable vWF
fragments can also be used to inhibit the activity.
vWF and fibrinogen contain within their respective polypeptides a domain of primary sequence consisting of Arg-Gly-Asp (residues 1744-1746 in mature vWF subunit) which is known to be at least part of the platelet GPIIb/IIIa recognition site for these adhesive proteins. Synthetic peptides patterned upon the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence have been demonstrated to inhibit binding of fibrinogen or vWF to platelet GPIIb/IIIa membrane receptors. See Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., USA, 83, 5708-5712 (1986) and U.S. Patent No. 4,683,291.
Aggregation of platelets (the result of which is the crosslinked platelet mass or thrombus) can be inhibited in a patient by administering therapeutic compositions containing mutant polypeptides derived from the Arg-Gly-Asp region of the mature vWF subunit. Such polypeptides possessing enhanced binding affinity are effectively made by systematic random mutagenesis (see Example 16, method 1 thereof) of a - suitable DNA sequence encoding the GPIIb~IIIa binding domain of vWF. Screening of mutant clones for expressed polypeptide of enhanced binding activity follows the procedure of Example 28.

The Factor VIII Bindinq Domain The above mutagenesis procedures are also applicable to targeting the interaction of vWF with coagulation factor VIII, a necessary participant in secondary hemostasis and believed to be necessary to facilitate activation of coagulation factor X by factor IX,. Factor VIII has been shown to be extremely labile except when complexed to vWF.
This invention provides a fragment of vWF capable of binding factor VIII, and having, relative to wild type, an enhanced WO~2~1719' PCT/~'S92/~7 s~
affinity therefor, but of insufficient size to substantially protect factor VIII so complexed from denaturation or proteolysis. Screening of mutant vWF polypeptides for enhanced binding affinity follows the procedure of Example 30.
.

Inactivation of Heparin Sites With respect to the use of the 52/48 kg/mol vWF fragment as an antithrombotic, or of any of the t:herapeutic polypeptides patterned thereupon, the following considerations are of particular significance. It has been mentioned previously that it is possible for more than one of the GPIb~, glycosaminoglycan (proteoglycan), or collagen binding domains of such a therapeutic polypeptide to be occupied by a respective target receptor or ligand at any particular time. Methods were described to prevent one or both of the undesired binding activities, said aforementioned methods involving further modifications to the therapeutic polypeptide.
It must be considered also that delivery of such therapeutic polypeptides to target platelet GPIb~ receptors in a patient suffering from vascular disease or otherwise at risk to thrombosis involves the exposure of the polypeptide to all of the macromolecules present in the vascular system, a situation which is very different from a two or three component in vitro binding assay at low total protein concentration. It is noted, for example, that there are many types of glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans present in the extracellular matrix (the subendothelium) of the vascular system. Although proteoglycans may be deemed confined to such a matrix and unavailable for binding to vWF in undamaged vessels, glycosaminoglycans are more widely distributed.
In particular, glycosaminoglycans are found on the surface of many types of human cells including those that form the walls of blood vessels. In addition, heparin itself has anticoagulant activity and is commonly administered to patients presenting or suspected of presenting a vascular disease state. Consequently, there is a considerable possibility that the administration of a monomeric 52/48 WO 92/1719~ PCl`/~!S92/02~7~
2~07~ 66 kg/mol polypeptide or, for example, a modified form of the polypeptide containing also one or more Type IIb mutations (see Example 22 below) as an intended antithrombotic will be ineffective, the therapeutic molecules having sufficient affinity for the widely dispersed array of glycosaminoglycan macromolecules or for additionally administered heparins.
Accordingly, it is preferred in the practice of the invention, with respect to the design of antithrombotic polypeptides patterned upon the 52t48 kg/mol vWF fragment, said fragments intended to have affinity for platelet GPIb~
receptors, that the binding domain for glycosaminoglycans within such fragments be deleted or inactivated by, for example, one of the following methods:
(A) site directed or loop out mutagenesis in M13mpl8 (see Example 7) to ex~ress a further mutagenized polypeptide from which the glycosaminoglycan binding domain is deleted; or (B) subjecting the mature subunit 52/48 kg/mol fragment to selective proteolysis to preserve subfragments of the residue 441-730 sequence having GPIb~
binding ability, and which can then be covalently reattached, but minus a deleted section of the fragment such as a subset of the intervening residue 509-695 region; or (C) covalent modification of the vWF amino acid sequence domain which confers the additional and undesired binding function to inactivate it.
A similar strategy can be employed to delete or inacti~ate the collagen binding function of such therapeutic polypeptides. Removal of both the potential collagen and potential glycosaminoglycan (proteoglycan~ binding functions ~rom such vWF-derived therapeutics is also within the scope of the invention.
Similar strategies may be used to modify different or larger fragments of vWF directed to platelet GPIb~ binding sites, including those up to the size of the entire mature subunit thereof, or larger, and demonstrated to have potential antithrombotic activity but one or more potential binding sites for other ligands or receptors, the deletion or WO92/17192 67 2 1 ~ 7 .~ ~

inactivation of which is preferable. Additionally, and with respect to those polypeptides of the invention patterned upon the mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, which are directed to receptor sites or macromolecules other than GPIb~
(see Example 25-30), it is noted that any other binding function of the polypeptide can be delet:ed or inactivated by the above-mentioned strategies.
Additionally preferred in the treatment of hemorrhagic disease is a polypeptide patterned upon the 116 kg/mol vWF
homodimer (Example 7, below), directed to the platelet GPIb~
receptor, in which one or more other binding functions of the polypeptide have been deleted or inactivated.

Antibodies with Therapeutic Activity Antibodies, and particularly conformation dependent lS antibodies, are powerful tools for analyzing the structure and function of macromolecules. By blocXing macromolecular interactions, antibodies can also have important therapeutic utility.
Accordingly, this invention includes within its scope an antibody which is specific for the vWF subunit, or any polypeptide containing a subset thereof, and which is made by a process which involves immunizing animals with a polypeptide patterned upon the mature vWF subunit sequence between approximately residue 441 and residue 730 thereof, and containing one or more residues corresponding to a Type IIB vWF, or with any other polypeptide of the invention.
Further diagnostic or therapeutically useful antibodies can be generated against polypeptides so patterned upon the above stated sequence region and in which cysteine residues 509 and 695 form a disulfide bond, thereby recreating important domains of tertiary structure. Procedures useful in immunizing animals with vWF polypeptides are well known in the art.

Therapeutic com~ositions one or more of the polypeptides of the present invention can be formulated into pharmaceutical preparations for therapeutic, diagnostic, or other uses. To prepare them for WO92/1719~ . ' PCT/~IS92/02~7~
~107100 6~
intravenous administration, the compositions are dissolved in water containing physiologically compatible substances such as sodium chloride (e.g. at 0.35-2.0 M), glycine, and the like and having a buffered pH compatible with physiological conditions, which water and physiologically compatible substances comprise a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
With respect to the monomeric 52/48 kg/mol polypeptides of the invention or other antithrombotic polypeptides, the amount to administer for the prevention or inhibition of thrombosis will depend on the severity with which the patient is subject to thrombosis, but can be determined readily for any particular patient.
With respect to the recombinant 116 kg/mol polypeptides of the invention, or other dimeric polypeptide subfragments thereof, the amount to administer for the treatment of von Willebrand disease will depend on the severity with which th~
patient is subject to hemorrhage, but can be determined readily for any particular patient.

ExamPles The following Examples are representative of the practice of the invention.

I. Construction of vWF Polypeptides Suitable to Carry IIb-Type Mutations Example 1 - Expression of a mutant cysteine-free mature von Willebrand factor subunit fragment having an amino terminus at residue 441 (arginine) and a ca~rb`oxy_terminus at residue 733 ~valine)_ Preparation of a cDNA Clone from pre-pro-von Willebrand Factor mRNA
A cDNA clone encoding the entire von Willebrand factor gene (for the pre-propeptide) was provided by Dr. ~ennis Lynch, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA and was prepared as described in Lynch, D.C. et al., Cell, 41, 49-56 (1985). It had been deemed probable that the size of vWF
mRNA would likely exceed that of human 28S type rRNA.
Accordingly, total RNA from endothelial cells (the major source of plasma vWF) was sedimented in sucrose gradients, WO92/1719' ~ P~ 92/0~47 with RNA larger than 28S being selected for construction of a cD~A library.
This enriched fraction was further purified using two separate cycles of poly(u)-Sephadex0 chromatography to select for RNA species (mRNA) having 3' polyadenylated ends. Lynch et al., supra, estimated the prevalence of vWF mRNA in this fraction at about 1 in 500, which fraction was used to generate a cDNA library of approximately 60,000 independent recombinants.
To generate the cDNA library, ~tandard techniques were used. The mRNA population was primed using an oligo (dT) primer, and then transcribed with a reverse transcriptase.
The RNA strands were then removed by alkaline hydrolysis, leaving cDNA anticoding strands (equivalent to transcribed strands) which were primed by hairpin looping for second strand synthesis using DNA polymerase I. The hairpin loop was removed with S~ nuclease and rough ends were repaired with DNA polymerase I.
GC tailing, Maniatis, T. et al., Molecular Clonin~, 2nd ed., v.1, p.5.56 tl987), was then used to anneal the cDNA
into plasmid vector pBR322. Oligo(dC) tails were added to the cDNA fragments with terminal transferase and were annealed to oligo(dG) tailed pBR322. The plasmids were transformed into ampicillin sensitive E.coli, strain HB101 for propagation. Suitable clones were identified after screening with 32P-la~elled- cDNA prepared as reverse transcriptase product of immunopurified vWF polysomes.
Positive clones were subcloned into pSP64 (Promega Co., Madison, WI).

Primer Directed AmPlification of cDNA
cDNA representing the full length pre-pro-vWF gene from pSP64 was subjected to enzymatic amplification in a polymerase chain reaction. Based upon the e~tablished nucleotide sequence of the pre pro-vWF gene, Bonthron, D. et al. Nucl. Acids Res., 14(17), 7125-7127 (1986); Mancuso, D.
et al., . of Biolo~ical Çhemistry, v.264(33), 19514-19527 (1989) oligonucleotides flanking the region of interest (designated (1), SEQ ID N0: 3, and (2), SEQ ID N0: 4) were W092/1719~ ~0 7 ~ ~ ~ PCT/~'S92/0247 prepared. All oligonucleotides used herein were synthesized by the phosphoramidite method , Sinha, et al., Tetrahedron Letters, 24, 5843 ~1983), using a model 380B automated system, Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA.
Oligonucleotide (1) (SEQ ID N0: 3) 5'ACGAATTC CGG CGT TTT GCC TCA GGA3 ' EcoRI Arg~ Gly~

Oligonucleotide (2) (SEQ ID NO 4)
3'GG GAC CCC GGG TTC TCC TTG AGG TAC CA~ TCGAAG5' 5'cc cta ggg ccc aag agg aac tcc atg qta aqcttc3' Leu~s Met732Val733HindIII

The oligonucleotides overlap the ends of the coding region for that fragment of the mature vWF subunit which can be produced by digestion with trypsin and which begins with residue 449 (valine) and ends with residue 728 (lysine).
Oligonucleotide (1) corresponds to coding strand DNA
(analogous with mRNA) ~or amino acid positions 4~1 to 446 and adds an EcoRI restriction site 5' to the codon for amino acid 441. Oligonucleotide (2) corresponds to the non-coding strand (transcribed strand) of mature vWF DNA for amino acids positions 725-733 and adds a HindIII restriction site 3' to the codon for amino acid 733. The coding strand complementary to (2) is shown in lower case letters.
Using the above oligonucleotides with the full length cDNA as template, a cDNA~fragment corresponding to mature vWF
residues Nos. 441-733, and containing EcoRI and Hind III
linkers, was then synthesize~ in a polymerase chain reaction following the method of Saiki, R.X. et al. Science, 239, 487-491 (1988).
The procedure utilizes a segment of double-stranded vWF
cDNA, a subsegment of which is to be amplified, and two single-stranded oligonucleotide primers (in this case oligonucleotides (1), (2)) which flank the ends of the subsegment. The primer oligonucleotides (in the presence of a DNA polymerase and deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates) were added in much higher concentrations than the DNA to be amplified.

.

WO92/1719 ~ P ~ ~'S92t0~7 Specifically, PCR reactions were performed with a DNA
thermal cycler tPerkin Elmer Co., Norwalk, CT/Cetus Corporation, Berkeley, CA) using Taq polymerase (Thermus aquaticus). The reactions were run in lO0 ~e volumes containing l.0 ~g of pre-pro-vWF cDNA, l.0 ~g of each synthetic oligonucleotide primer, and buffer consisting of 50 mM KCl, lO mM Tris HCl ~pH 8.3), 1.5 m~ MgCl2, 0.1% gelatln (BioRad Co., Richmond, CA) and 200 mM of each dNTP. PCR
conditions were 35 cycles of 30 seconds at 94OC, 30 seconds at 52C and l minute at 72C. ~mplified fragments were then purified and isolated by electrophoresis through a 2% agarose gel, Maniatis et al., Molecular Cloninq A_Laborator~ Manual, 164-170, Cold Spring Harbor Lab., Cold Spring Harbor, NY
(1982).
The vast majority of polynucleotides which accumulate after numerous rounds of denaturation, oligonucleotide annealing, and synthesis, represent the desired double-stranded cDNA subsegment suitable for further amplification by cloning.
20- For some experiments, cDNA corresponding to the mature vWF fragment beginning at amino acid sequence posi~ion 44l and ending at position 733 was prepared and amplifisd directly from platelet mRNA following the procedure of Newman, P.J. et al. J. Clin. Invest., ~2, 739-743 (l988).
Primer nucleotides No. 440 and 733 were utilized as before with the resulting cDNA containing EcoRI and HindIII linkers.

Insertion of cDNA into Ml3m~18 Cloninq Vehicle The resultant double stranded von Willebrand factor cDNA
corresponding to the amino acid sequence from residue 44l to 733 was then inserted, using EcoRI and HindIII restriction enzymes, into the double stranded replicative form of bacteriophage Ml3mpl8 which contains a multiple cloning site having compatible EcoRI and HindIII sequences.
Ml3 series filamentous phages infect male tF factor containing) E.coli strains. The infecting form of the virus is represented by single stranded DNA, the (') strand, which i5 converted by host enzymes into a double stranded circular form, con~aining also the minus (~) strand, which double WO92tl7192 PCT/~'S92/0247 - 2107 1 a ~ 72 stranded structure is referred to as the replicative form (RF). The ability to isolate a stable single stranded (+) form of the virus is particularly useful to verify the integrity of any cloned sequences therein. See Messing, J., Meth.~ ymz~gy, 101, 20-78 (1983); Yanish-Perron, C. et - al., Gene, 33, 103-109 (1985).
Accordingly, the vWF cDNA insert was completely sequenced using single-stranded dideoxy methodology (Sanger, F. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci USA, 74, 5463-5467 (1977)), utilizing the single-stranded (~) form of M13mpl8, to confirm that the vWF cDNA fragment contained the correct coding sequence for mature vWF subunit residues 441-733.

Site-Directed Mutaqenesis to Replace Cysteine Residues Cysteine residues 459, 462, 464, 471, 474, 509, and 695, within the mature vWF fragment corresponding to amino acids 441 to 733, were replaced with glycine residues by substitution of glycine codons for cysteine codons in the corresponding cDNA. In order to accomplish this, oligonucleotides (see Sequence Listing ID NOS: 5-8) encompassing the region of each cysteine codon of the vWF
cDNA were prepared as non-coding strand ~transcribed strand) with the corresponding base substitutions needed to substitute glycine for cysteine. The oligonucleotides used were as follows:
Oligonucleotide (3) (SEQ ID NO: 5) 3'GGA CTC GTG CCG~GTC TAA CCG GTG CAA CTA CAA CAG5' 5'cct gag gac gg~ cag att qqc cac qqt gat gtt gtc3' Pro Glu His Gly Gln Ile Gly His Gly Asp Val Val ~59 462 46~
(simultaneously replacing cysteines 459, 462, 464).

Oligonucleotide (4~ (SEQ ID NO: 6) 3'TTG GAG TGG CCA CTT CGG CCG GTC CTC GGC5' 5'aac ctc acc qqt gaa gcc qqc cag gag ccg3' Asn Leu Thr Gly Glu Ala Gly Gln Glu Pro (simultaneously replacing cysteines 471, 474) WO92/1719' PCT/US92/02~7~
73 C2~ 7~
Oligonucleotide (5) (SEQ ID NO: 7) 3'CTA AAG ATG CCG TCG TCC G5' 5' gat ttc tac gqc agc agg c3' Asp Phe Tyr Gly Ser Arg (replacing cysteine 509) Oligonucleotide (6) (SEQ ID NO: 8) 3' TCG ATG GAG CCA CTG GAA CGG5' 5'agc tac ctc qgt gac ctt gcc3' lOSer Tyr Leu Gly Asp Leu Ala (replacing cysteine 695) Hybridizing oligonucleotides are shown in capita:L
letters and are equivalent to the transcribed strand (non-coding DNA). The equivalent coding strand is shown in lowercase letters with the correspondiny amino acids shown by standard three letter designation. (for designations see Table l) As elaborated below, cysteines 459, 462 and 464 were replaced simultaneously using oligonucleotide (3). Cysteine residues 471 and 474 were then replaced simultaneously using oligonucleotide (~. Cysteine residues 509 and 695 were then replaced individually using oligonucleotides (5) and (6) respectively.
The cysteine to glycine cDNA substitutions were accomplished following the procedure of Kunkel, T.A., Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82,488-492 (198S) which procedure repeats a series of steps for each oligonucleotide and takes advantage of conditions which select against a uracil containin~ DNA template:
(A) Ml3mpl8 phage, containing wild type vWF
cDNA corresponding to amino acid positions 441 to 733, is grown in an E.coli CJ236 mutant dut~ung~strain in a urac~l rich medium. Since this E.coli strain is deficient in deoxyuridine triphosphatase (dut-), an intracellular pool of dUTP accumulates which competes with dTTP for incorporation into DNA.

WO92/1719' 2 ~ 0 71~ O PCT/~!S92/02~7~

(see Shlomai, J. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 253(9), 3305-3312 (1978). Viral DNA
synthesized under these conditions includes several uracil insertions per vlral genome and is stable only in an E.coli strain which is incapable of removing uracil, suc:h as ~ung~) strains which lack uracil gly~osylase. Uracil-containing nucleoticles are lethal in single stranded (+) M13mpl8 DNA in ung' strains due to the creation of abasic sites by uracil glycosylase.
(B) Single-stranded (+) viral DNA is isolated from culture media in which phage were grown in E.coli strain CJ236 dut~ung~.
The single stranded (~) form of the virus contains the specified vWF cDNA at its multiple cloning site which cDNA is equivalent to the nontranscribed vWF DMA
strand.
(C) Oligonucleotide (3), which contains codon alterations necessary to substitute glycines for cysteines at positions 459, 462 and 464, is then annealed in vitro to single stranded (+) phage DNA.
Generally, a wide range of oligonucleotide concentrations is suitable in this procedure. Typically 40 ng of oligonucleotide was annealed to 0.5-1.0 ~g M13mpl8 phage t~) DNA.
(D) All missing sequence of the M13mpl8(~) strand is then completed in vitro using T7 DNA polymerase and T4 D~A ligase in a dTTP rich environment thereby generating a transcribable vWF cDNA sequence corresponding to amino acid positions 441 to 733 of the mature vWF subunit.
(E) The double stranded M13mpl8 phage, now containing a thymine normal (~) strand ' W O 9~/17192 PC~r/~!S92/0247~
75 2~
and a (+) strand with several uracil substitutions, is transformed into a wild type E.coli XL-1 Blue (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) strain which contains normal levels of uracil glycosylase and - deoxyuridine triphosphatase.
(F) Uracil glycosylase and other enzymes present in the new host initiate destruction of the uracil-containing (+) strand of the double-strand phages, leading after replication in the host of remaining phage (~) strand DNA to the presence of stable thymine-normal double stranded (RF) DNA which reflects t:he glycine mutations induced by the oligonucleotide.
(G) Steps (A) to (F) of the above process are then repeated for each of oligonucleotides (4), (5) and (6) until each successive cysteine codon of the vWF
sequence within the M13mpl8 phage has been replaced by a glycine codon.
(H) Vpon completion of mutagenesis proceduras the sequence of the vWF cDNA insert was reconfirmed using the single stranded DNA
dideoxy method. (Sanger, F. et al., supra~

Construction of Expression Plasmids.
The double stranded vWF cDNA ~ragment containing 7 site-specific cysteine to glycine mutations is then removed from M13mpl8 phage by treatment with EcoRI and HindIII restriction endonucleases, after which the ends of the fragment are modified with BamHI linkers tRoberts, R.J. et al. Nature, 265, 82-~4 (1977)) for cloning into a high ef~iciency E.coli expression vector. The particular expression vector chosen is plasmid pET-3A, developed by Rosenberg, A.H. et al. Gene, v.56, 125-135, (1987) and which is a pBR322 derivative containing a high efficiency (~lO) T7 transcription promoter WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/0247~
2~7~ 7~
directly adjacent to the ~amHI linker site. When containing the above-specified fragment of mutant vWF cDNA, the pET~3A
vehicle is refered to as "p7E" or p7E expression plasmid.
A second pET-3A-derived expression plasmid (designated p7D) was constructed containing the ident:ical vWF coding - sequence cloned into the plasmid in the opposite orientation.
p7D should be unable to express the vWF polypeptide fragment.
A third expression plasmid (pJD18) contains wild type 52/48 tryptic vWF fragment CDNA encoding the vWF amin~ acid lO sequence between residues 441 and 733, (with 7 cysteines) in the same pET-3A vector.
The p7E (or p7D and pJD18) expression plasmids were then cloned into an ampicillin sensitive E.coli strain, BL21(DE3), Novagen Co., Madison WI, according to a well established 15 protocol Hanahan, D., J Mol. Biol., 166, 557-580 (1983).
Strain BL21(DE3) is engineered to contain a gene for T7 RNA
polymerase so that the vWF insert can be transcribed with high efficiency.

Expression of Mutant vWF Polypeptides 2Q Three separate samples of E.coli strain BL21(DE3) containing respectively p7E, p7D or pJDl8 expression plasmids were innoculated into 5-6 ml of 2X-YT growth medium containing 200 ~g/ml of ampicillin, and grown overnight at - 37C to create fully grown cultures. 2X-YT growth medium contains, per liter of water, lO gm Bacto-tryptone, 10 gm yeast extract and 5 gm NaCl. Five ml of each overnight culture was then innoculated into 500 ml of 2X-YT medium, again containing 200 ~g/ml of ampicillin and grown for 2 hours at 37C with shaking.
After the 2 hour incubation period, the cultures were induced for protein expression by addition of isopropyl-beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside to a concentration of 5 mM. The incubation was then continued ~or 3 hours at 37OC.
A high level of expression of vWF polypeptide was obtained with p7E and pJD18 resulting in the generation of cytoplasmic granules or "inclusion bodies" which contain high concentrations of vWF polypeptide in essentially insoluble form. Solubilization of vWF polypeptide was accomplished WO92/1719~ ~ a 7 ~P~ S92/02~7 according to the followlng procedure. As explained in Example 2, p7E and pJD~8 extracts responded very differently to solubilization procedures. See Maniatis, T. et al., Molecular Cloninq, 2nd ed., vol. 3, Sec. 17.37, (1989) Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, for a general discussion of the properties of, and successful manipulation strategies for, inclusion bodies.
The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4000 g for 15 minutes in a JA-14 rotor at 40C. The pelleted cells were washed in 50 ml of ice cold buffer (O.l M NaCl, lO mM Tris pH
9.0, l mM EDTA) and repelleted by centrifugation at 4000 g at 4C.
The cell pellets from p7E, p7D and pJDl8 cultures were each redissolved in 5 ml of lysing buffer and kept ice-cold for 30 minutes. The lysing buffer comprises a solution of sucrose 25%(w/v), 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (PMSF), 1 mM ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid tEDTA), 2 mg/ml lysozyme and 50 mM Tris hydrochloride, adjusted to pH 8Ø
After the 30 minute incubation, aliquots of l.0 Molar MgCl2 and MnCl2 were added to make the lysing solution lO mM
in each cation. Sixty ~g of DNAseI ~Boehringer-Mannheim) was then added and the incubation was continued at room temperature for 30 minutes.
Twenty ml of buffer No. 1 (0.2 M NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, and l~
(w/v) 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]-l-propanesulfonate (CHAPS), 1% (w/v) Non-idet 40, and 20 mM
Tris hydrochloride, pH 7.5) was then added to the incubation mixture. The insoluble material was pelleted by centrifugation at 14,000 g (12,000 rpm in a JA-20 rotor) for 30 minutes at 4C.
The relatively .insoluble pelleted material derived from each culture (which contains the desired polypeptides except in the case of p7D) was washed at 25C in lO ml of buffer No.
2 (0.5% (w/v) Triton X-lO0 surfactant, 2 mM EDTA, 0.02 M Tris hydrochloride, pH 7.5) and vortexed extensively. The suspension was centrifuged at 14,000 g for 30 minutes at 4C
and the supernatant was then discarded. The process of resuspension of the pelleted material in buffer No. 2, vortexing and centrifugation was repeated twice.

WO92/17192 PCT/US92/0247~
~1071~0 78 -Each pellet was then washed in 5 ml of buffer No. 3 (0.02 M Tris hydrochloride, pH 7.5, and 2 mM EDTA) at 25DC
and vortexed extensively. The suspension was then centrifuged at 4C for 30 minutes at 14,000 g after which the supernatant was discarded leaving a pelll_t of inclusion body derived material (the "wet pellet") with a clay-like consistency (With respect to the following final steps, and in replacement therefor, see also Example 20 which presents an additional improved procedure).
The insoluble pellet was slowly redissolved in an 8 Molar ure~ solution held at room tempera~ure for 2 hours, after which solubilization was continued overnight at 4C.
The urea-soluble material was extensively dialyzed against a solution of 0.15 M NaCl containing 20 mM Hepes !N-[2-hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N-[2-ethanesulfonic acid]) (pH 7.4) ("Hepes-buffered saline") at 4C. The solublized peptide extracts were assayed for purity (Example 2), used in vWF binding inhibition assays (Example 3) or subject to further purification. Further purification steps should not 20- be delayed and the samples should remain cold.
The cysteine-free vWF polypeptide (comprising subunit positions 441 to 733) constitutes more than 75% of the material solubilized from the inclusion bodies according to the above procedure. Further purification of the cysteine-free mutant vWF polypeptide was accomplished by redialyzingthe partially purified peptide extract against 6 M
guanidine-HCl, 50 mM Tris HCl, pH 8.8 followed by dialysis against 6 M urea, 25 mM Tris HCl, 20 mM KCl, O.l mM EDTA, pH
8Ø The extract was then subjected to high performance liquid chromatography using ~-Sepharose~ Fast Flow (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) for anion exchange. The column was preequilibrated with 6 M urea, 25 mM Tris HCl, 20 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA pH 8Ø Elution of the vWF polypeptide utilized the same buffer except that the concentration of KCl was raised to 250 mM. Polypeptide samples used for ~urther assays were redialyzed against 0.15 M NaCl, 20 mM Hepes, pH
7.4. However, long term storage was best achieved in urea buffer (6 M urea, 25 mM Tris HCl, 20 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA pH
8Ø Final p7E-vWF polypeptide percent amino acid WO92/17192 PCT/~IS92/0247~
~,~Q7~

compositions (by acid hydrolysis~ compared closely with values predicted from published sequence informa~ion (Bonthron, D. et al. and also Mancuso, D. et al. in Example 1, supra; see also Figure 1).

Example 2 - Characterization of the cysteine-free mutant von Willebrand factor fragment produced bY expression ~lasmid P7E
Urea solubilized and dialyzed polypeptides extracted from inclusion bodies of cultures containing expression plasmids p7E, p7D and pJD18 were analyzed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ~PAGE) and immunoblotting.

Characterization bv SDS-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis The purity and nature of the expression plasmid extracts, which had been urea-solubilized and then extensively dialyzed, were first analyzed using the denaturing sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis procedure of Weber, K. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 244, 4406-~412 (1969), as modified by Laemli, U.K. ~ature, 227, 680-685 (1970) using an acrylamide concentration of 10%.
The resultant gels were stained with Coomassie blue and compared.
The extract from expression plasmid p7E contains as the major component, the mutant von Willebrand factor polypeptide which migrates with an apparent molecular weight of approximately 36,000 gram/mole (g/mol). The polypeptide appears as a single band under ~oth reducing conditions (addition of between lO and 100 mM dithiothreitol "DTT" to the sample for 5 min at 100C prior to running the gel in a buffer also containing the same DTT concentration) and nonreduciny conditions, which result is consistent with the substitution of glycine residues for all of the cysteine residues therein. No vWF polypeptide could be extracted from host cells containing p7D expression plasmids as expected from the opposite orientation of the vWF cDNA insert.
The cysteine-containing vWF polypeptide expressed by host cells containing pJD18 plasmids, and which contains the wild type amino acid sequence of the 52/48 fragment, (herein WO92/1719' PCT/~'S92/02~7~
2~7~ 80 represented by a residue 441 to 733 cloned fragment) behaved differently under reducing and nonreducing conditions of electrophoresis. The wild-type sequence expressed from pJD18 forms intermolecular disulfide bridges resulting in large molecular weight aggregates which are unable to enter the 10%
acrylamide gels. After reduction (incubation with 100 mM DTT
for 5 min at 100C), the vWF peptide migrates as a single band with a molecular weight of approximately 38,000.

Characterization bv Immunoblottinq Polypeptides expressed from p7E, p7D and pJD18 were further characterized by immunoblotting ("Western blotting") according to a standard procedure Burnett et al., A. Anal.
Biochem., 112, 195-203, (1981) and as recommended by reagent - suppliers. Samples containing approximately 10 ~g of protein from the urea-solubilized and dialyzed inclusion body extracts of host cells (containing p7E, p7D and pJD18 plasmids) were subjected to electrophoresis on 10%
polyacrylamide gels, Laemli, U.K. Nature, 227, 680-685 (1970), in the presence of 2% concentration of sodium dodecyl sulfate.
The proteins were blotted and immobilized onto a nitrocellulose sheet ~Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH) and the pattern was then visualized using immunoreactivity.
The von Willebrand factor-specific monoclonal antibodies (from mice) used to identify the polypeptides were RG-46 (see Fugimura, Y. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 261(1), 381-385 (1986), Fulcher, C.A. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 1648-1652 (1982)), and NMC-4 (Shima, M. et al. J. Nara Med.
Assoc., 36, 662-669 (1985) ), both of which have epitopes within the expressed vWF polypeptide of this invention.
The secondary antibody (~2sI-rabbit anti-mouse IgG), labelled by the method of Fraker, P.J. et al. Biochem.
Biophys. Res. Commun., 80, 849-857 (1978)), was incubated for 60 minutes at 25C on the nitrocellulose sheet. After rinsing, the sheet was developed by autoradiography.
Peptide extracts from host cells containing p7E and pJDl8 expression plasmids display strong immunoreactivity for R5-46 antibody and a weaker but definite affinity for NMC-4 WO92/1719~ PCT/~!S92/02~7 81 ~ ~ 7~
antibody. As expected, peptide extracts from p7D plasmids show no immunoreactivity with either RG-46 or NMC-4.

Example 3 - Inhibition of botrocetin-induced binding of vW~ to platelets by the cysteine-free mutant polypeptide exPressed bY p7E
It has been demonstrated that botrocetin, extracted from the venom of Bothrops ~araraca modulates the in vitro binding of multimeric von Willebrand factor to platelets (Read, et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 75, 4514-4518 (1978)) and that botrocetin binds to vWF within the region thereof containing amino acid sequence positions 441-733 (of the mature subunit~, and thus the GPIb binding domain. (Andrews, R.K.
et al., Biochemistry, 28, 8317-8326 (1989)).
The urea-solubilized and dialyzed polypeptide extracts, obtained (according to the method of Example 1) from cultures containing expression plasmids p7E, p7D and pJD18, were tested without further purification for their ability to inhibit botrocetin-induced vWF binding to formalin-fixed platelets on a dose dependent basis.
Formalin-fixed platelets, prepared according to the method o~ ~acFarlane, D. et al., Thromb. Diath. Haemorrh. 34, 306-308 (1975), were pre-incubated at room temperature for 15 minutes with specified dilutions of peptide extracts obtained from cultures containing pJD18, p7D, and p7E plasmids.
Botrocetin, (Sigma, St. Louis, M0) to a final concentration of 0.4 ~g/ml, and ~sI-labelled multimeric vWF (isolated from human plasma cryoprecipitate according to the method of Fulcher, C.A. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 16~8-1652 (1982), and labelled according to the method of Fraker, P.J. et al. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 80, 849-857 (1978)) were then added to the incubation mixture, and the ~mount of ~ vWF bound to the platelets was determined.
~ vWF binding to the platelets was referenced against 100% binding which was defined as the amount of I~I- vWF
bound in the absence`of added peptide extracts.
Peptide extracts from expression plasmids p7D, and also pJDlB ~unreduced and unalkylated) could not compete with plasma-derived vWF for platelet GPIb receptor binding sites.
The peptide extract from plasmid p7E was effective in a dose ~ WO92/17]9~ PCT/~IS92/02~7~
2~7~ 82 -~-dependent manner (using a range of o to 100 ~g extract/ml) in inhibiting vWF binding. The concentration of urea-solubilized polypeptide extract (~g/ml) in the incubation mixture reflects the total protein concentration from the extract. Addition of peptide extracts to the reaction mixture causes certain nonspecific effects which raise apparent initial binding to 110% of the value found in the absence of the added peptide extracts. The l~-IvWF
concentration used was 2~g/ml.

Example 4 - Expression of a mutant vWF fragment of reduced cysteine content containing a disulfide-de~endant conformation Utilizing the procedures of Example 1, except as modified below, a mutant vWF polypeptide fragment (corresponding to the mature vWF subunit sequence from residue 441 to residue 733) was prepared in which the cysteines at positions ~59, 462, 464, 471 and 474 were each replaced by a glycine residue. Cysteine residues were retained at positions 509 and 695, and allowed to form an intrachain disulfide bond.
Site directed mutagenesis was performed only with oligonucleotides No. 459 and 471, thereby substituting glycine codons only at positions 459, 462, 464, 471 and 474.
Upon completion of mutagenesis procedures, the sequence of the mutant vWF cDNA was confirmed using the single-stranded dideoxy method.
The double-stranded~form of the vWF cDNA insert ~containing 5 cysteine to glycine mutations) was then removed from M13mpl8 phage by treatment with EcoRI and HindIII
restriction endonucleases, modified as in Example 1 with BamHI linkers, and cloned into pET-3A. The p~T-3A vehicle so formed is referred to as "p5E" or p5E expression pIasmid.
The p5E expression plasmids were then cloned into ampicillin sensitive E.coli strain BL21(DE3), Novagen Co., Madison, WI, according to the procedure o~ Hanahan, D., J.
Mol. Biol., 166, 557-580 (1983). The p5E mutant polypeptide was expressed from cultures of E.coli BL21 (DE3) following the procedure of Example l except that solubilization of inclusion body pellet material in the presence of 8 Molar WO92/17192 PCT/~IS92/02~7 83 2 ~ 't~
urea need not be continued beyond the initial 2 hour period at room temperature, at which point redissolved material had reached a concentration of 200 ~g/ml. Oxidation of cysteine residues 509 and 695 to form a disulfide bond was accomplished by dialysis overnight against ~epes-buffered saline. Formation of intrachain rather than interchain disulfide bonds is favored by allowing thiol oxidation to proceed at a low protein concentration such as S0-100 ~g/ml.
As in Example 1 pertaining to the p7E extracts, final purification of urea-solubilized inclusion body preparations was accomplished by dialysis against the 6 M ~uanidine and 6 M urea buffers followed by anion exchange chromatography.

Example 5 - Characterization of the mutant vWF
fraqment ~roduced by expression plasmid p5E
The mutant von Willebrand factor polypeptides produced by cultures containing expression plasmid p5E were characterized utilizing the procedures of Example 2, and in particular compared~with the vWF fragment expressed by plasmid p7E.
Urea-solubilized and dialyzed polypeptides extracted from inclusion bodies (according to the procedure of Example
4) were compared with similar extracts from p7E plasmid cultures produced as in Example 1.

Characterization bY SDS-PolYacrYlamide Gel Electrophoresis The denaturing sodium dodecylsulfate gel procedure of Example 2 was used to compare the p5E vWF fragments, which can form disulfide bonds using cysteine residues 509 and 695, with the p7E fragment which has no cysteine residues.
Electrophoresis was conducted using 7.5 ~g of protein extract 30 per lane on 10% acrylamide gels under reducing (100 mM
dithiothreitol) and non-reducing conditions.
Under reducing conditions, and after staining with Coomassie blue, extracts from p7E and p5E have identical electrophoretic mobilities.
Electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions, however, demonstrates the effects of disulfide bonds involving residues 509 and 695. A substantial amount of the p5E

WO92/1719~ 2 1 ~ 7 1 ~ PCT/~S92/0247 extract appears as a high molecular weight complex (resulting from interchain disulfide bonds) which enters the gel only slightly. Densitometric scanning of the gels of initial preparations indicates that approximately 25% of the p5E
polypeptide material found on nonreducing gels is represented by monomers of the 441-733 fragment having an apparent molecular weight of approximately 38,000. The percent of monomer present in p5E extracts can be improved significantly by conducting urea solubilization, dialysis, and thiol oxidation at a more dilute protein concentration, such as 50-100 ~g/ml, to favor intrachain rather than interchain disulfide bond formation.
This p5E monomeric species has a slightly higher mobility during electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions than the comparable p7E product species which has no cysteine residues. The mobilities of these p5E and p7E monomeric 38 kg/mol species appear identical under reducing conditions.
The slightly accelerated mobility of a polypeptide which retains tertiary structure in the presence of SDS under nonreducing conditions, when compared to the mobility of the homologous polypeptide which the anionic detergent converts completely into a negatively charged fully rigid rod under said conditions, is generally considered suggestive of the presence of an intrachain disulfide bond.

Characterization by Immunoblotting The behavior of p5E and p7E extracts were also examined using immwlological methods.
A~ in Example 2, vWF-specific murine monoclonal antibodies RG-46 and NMC-4 were used as probes. RG-46 has been demonstrated to recognize as its epitope a linear sequence of amino acids, comprising residues 694 to 708, within the mature von Willebrand factor subunit. The binding of this antibody to its determinant is essentially conformation independent. Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 263(34), 17901-17904 (1988).
NMC-4 however, has as its epitope the domain of the von Willebrand factor subunit which contains the glycoprotein Ib binding site. Mapping of the epitope has demonstrated that WO92/17192 PCT/~!S92/02~7~
2~ ~71~
it is contained within two discontinuous domains (comprising approximately mature vWF subunit residues 474 to 488 and also approximately residues 694 to 708) brought into disulfide-dependent association; Mohri, H. et al., supra, although it was unknown whether the disulfide bond conferring this tertiary conformation in the native vWF molecule was intrachain or interchain. Id. at 17903.
7.5 ~g samples ~of protein) were first run on 10% SDS
polyacrylamide gels so that the antigenic behavior of particular bands (under reducing and nonreducing conditions) could be compared with results obtained above by Coomassie blue staining. Immunoblotting was performed as in Example 2 to compare p5E and p7E extracts.
Application of antibody to the nitrocellulose sheets was usually accomplished with antibody solutions prepared as follows. Mice were injected with B-lymphocyte hybridomas producing NMC-4 or RG-46. Ascites fluid from peritoneal tumors was collected and typically contained approximately 5 mg/ml of monoclonal antibody. The ascites fluid was mixed (l part per lO00) into blocking fluid (PBS containing 5% (w/v) non-fat dry milk, Carnation) to minimize non-specific ~ackground binding. The antibody-containing blocking fluid was then applied to the nitrocellulose.
Under nonreducing conditions, the single chain p5E
polypeptide fragment (representing the sequence from residue 441 to residue 733) displayed an approximate 120 fold increase in binding affi~ity for NMC-4 compared to the comparable cystein-free species isolated from p7E also representing the primary sequence from residue 441 to 733.
After electrophoresis under reducing conditions (utilizing 100 mM DTT), the single chain p5E species showed a remarkably decreased affinity for NMC-4, which was then very similar to that of the cysteine-free p7E species under either reduced or nonreduced conditions. NMC-4 also fails, under reducing or non-reducing conditions, to recognize as an epitope disulfide-l-inked dimers from the p5E extract.
The nitrocellulose filters used to produce autoradio-graphs based on MMC-4 were rescreened with RG-46 by subtracting the initial NMC-4 exposure response, which was - . . .

WO92/1719~ ~CT/U~92/02~7~
21071~ 86 -~
kept low through a c~mbination of low antibody titer and short exposure time. The blnding of RG-46 to the p7E
36,000 kg/mol polypeptide on the filters is the same whether reducing or non-reducing conditions were chosen, consistent with the replacement of all cysteines by glycine in the expressed polypeptide.
A large molecular weight vWF antigen (reactive to RG-46) is present in the p5E polypeptide extract under nonreducing co~ditions. These p5E vWF` aggregates (reflecting interchain disulfide bonds) migrate under reducing conditions in the same position as the p7E polypeptide indicating disruption of their disulfide contacts. However, the large p5E interchain disulfide aggregates which are readily recognized under nonreducing conditions b~ RG-46 are not recognized by NMC-4 under eithex reducing or nonreducing conditions. It is thus demonstrated that the disulfide bond between residues 509 and 695 in native multimeric vWF subunits represents an intrachain contact.

Example 6 - Inhibition of the binding of an anti-GPIb monoclonal antibody by ~5E polypeptide Monoclonal antibody LJ-Ibl is known to complet~ly inhibit von Willebrand factor-platelet glycoprotein Ib interaction. Handa, M. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 261(27), 12579-12585 (1986). It reacts specifically with the amino terminal 45 kg/mol domain of GPIb~ which contains the vWF
binding site. Vicente, V. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 265, 274-280 (1990).
To assess the inhibitory activity of pSE extracts on antibody binding, a concentration of LJ-Ibl was first selected which would, in the absence of p5E extracts, provide half-maximal binding.
LJ-Ibl was iodinated by the procedure of Fraker, D.J. et al., Biochem. BioPhvs. Res. Commun., 80, 849-857 (1978) using Il~ from Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL and Iodogen (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, IL). Washed platelets were prepared by the albumin density gradient technigue of Walsh, et al., Br. J. ~aematol., 36, 281-298 (1977), and used at a count of 1 x 108/ml. Half-maximal binding of antibody to platelets WO92/171~2 PCT/US92/02~7 was observed at lO ~g/ml LJ-Ibl concentration, which concentration was selected for p5E polypeptide inhibition studies.
The p5E polypeptide extract was purified according to the procedure of ~xample 4 including final purification of the urea solubilized inclusion body preparation by dialysis against 6.0 M guanidine and urea solutions followed by Q-Sepharose¢ chromatography.
To evaluate binding, platelets were incubated for 30 minutes at 22-25C with LJ-Ibl (lO ~g/ml) and concentrations of purified p5E polypeptide (.002-lO.0 ~Molar). At the end of the incubation platelets with bound radioactivity were separated from free antibody by centrifugation at 12000 g through a 20% sucrose layer, in 0.15 M NaCl, 20 mM Hepes, pH
7.4, hereinafter "Hepes-buffered saline" buffer in a microcentrifuge tube. Inhibition of LJ-Ibl binding was plotted in the presence of 2 ~g/ml botrocetin (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, M0) and in the absence of botrocetin.
Less than 5 percent of the 1~I label bound to the platelets was contributed by labelled substances other than LJ-Ibl as determined by binding competition experiments in the presence of a lO0 fold excess of unlabelled LJ-Ibl.
Background labelling was subtracted from data points. Binding of 1~I LJ-Ibl was expressed as a percentage of a control assay lacking recombinant polypeptides. Fifty percent inhibition of 1~I L~-Ibl binding to platelets was achieved at lO ~M of p5E polypeptide ~without botrocetin whereas in the presence of botrocetin (2 ~g/ml), 50% inhibition may be achieved at less than O.l ~M. It is known that botrocetin induces in circulating multisubunit von Willebrand factor and single subunits thereof a conformational change which enhances or permits binding to the GPIb receptor. This example demonstrates that the p5E polypeptide (containing an intrachain cysteine 509-695 bond) beha~es very much like native circulating von Willebrand factor-with respect to how its activity is moduIated by botrocetin. Structural similarity is therefore indicated.

. :' W0~2~1719~ 21 ~7~a PC~/US92/02~7 . 88 Example 7 - Expression of homodimeric 116 kDa von Willebrand factor fragment in stable mammalian transformants This example is illustrative of conditions under which a DNA sequence encoding the mature vWF subunit fragment having an amino terminus at residue 441 (arginine) and a carboxy terminus at residue 730 (asparagine) may be expressed, and of the secretion from cultured mammalian host cells of a glycosylated homodimeric form of the 441-730 vWF fragment having native tertiary structure.
Expression of the 116 kg/mol homodimer is achieved using a DNA construct in which the following structural elements are assembled in a 5' to 3' direction (referring to the coding or nontranscribed strand):
15 . (A) a eucaryotic consensus translation initiation sequence, CCACC; and (B) the initiating vWF methionine codon followed by the remaining 21 amino acids of the vWF signal peptide, and (C) the coding se~uence corresponding to the first three amino acids from the amino terminus region of the vWF propeptide; and (D) the coding sequence for vWF amino acid residues 441-730, and ~E~ the "TGA" translation termination codon.

Preparation of a cDNA Clone from Pre~o-vcn Willebrand Factor mRNA
The cDNA clone, pvWF, encoding the entire pre-pro-vWF
gene was obtained from Dr. Dennis Lynch, Dana-Farber Cancer lnstitute, Boston, MA and was prepared as described in Lynch, D.C. et al., Cell, 41, 49-56 (1985). Preparation of pvWF was described in Example 1.

Primer Directed Amplification of cDNA - Phase I
The cDNA representing the full length pre-pre-vWF gene from pSP64 was subjected to enzymatic amplification in a polymerase chain reaction according to the method of Saiki, R.K. et al. Science, 239, 487-491 (1988), as described in Example 1.

WO92/17192 PCT/~IS92/02~7~
89 2 ~ ~ J ~
For PCR amplification, the following oligonucleotides were synthesized by the phosphoramidite method, Sinha, et al., Tetrahedron ~etters, 24, 5843 (1983~, using a model 380B
automated system, Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA.
Oligonucleotide (7) - see SEQ ID N0: 9
5' - GTCGACGCCACCATGATTCCTGCCAGA - 3' SalI Met Oligonucleotide ~8) - see SEQ ID N0: lO
5' - TCAGTTTCTAGATACAGCCC - 3' XbaI

In designing the oligonucleotides used herein, reference was made to the established nucleotide sequence of the pre pro-vWF gene, Bonthron, D. et al., Nucl. Acids Res., :L4(17), 7125 7127 (1986); Mancuso, D. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(33), lg5l4-l9527 tl989).
Oligonucleotide (7) was used to create a SalI
restriction site fused 5' to a eucaryotic consensus translation initiation sequence (CCACC) preceding the initiating methionine codon of the vWF cDNA. See Kozak, M.
Cell, 44, 183-292 (1986).
Oligonucleotide ~8) hybridizes with the non-transcribed strand (coding strand) of the vWF cDNA and overlaps with nucleotides which are approximately 360 base pairs from the initiating methionine in the pre-pro-vWF cDNA, thus spanning (at ~esidues 120 and 121 within the pre-pro-vWF cDNA
sequence) an XbaI restri~tion site.
The polymerase chain reaction therefore synthesized a cDNA fragment, containing (reading from 5' to 3' on the coding strand) a SalI site, a consensus initiation sequence, an initiating methionine codon, the codon sequence for the signal peptide, and approximately, the first lO0 codons of the propeptide, ~ollowed by an XbaI site.

Insertion of c~NA into Ml3mPl8 Cloninq Vehicle The amplified cDNA fragment w~s then inserted, using SalI and XbaI restriction enzymes, into the double stranded replicative form of bacteriophage Ml3mpl8 which contains a multiple cloning site having compatible SalI and XbaI

. .
: ' , ' : ' , , ~ .
' W O 92/1719~ PC~r/~'S92/0247' 21~7~ go sequences. The resulting clone is known as pADl. See Arrand, J.R. et al. J. Mol. Biol., 118, 127-135 (1978) and Zain, S.S. et al. J. Mol. Biol., 115, 249-255 tl977) for the properties of SalI and XbaI restriction enzymes respectively.
The vWF cDNA insert was completely sequenced using single-stranded dideoxy methodology (Sanger, F. et al. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA, 74, 5463-5467 (1977)) to confirm that the vWF
cDNA fragment contained the correct vWF coding sequence.

Primer Directed Amplification of cDNA - Phase II
lOcDNA corresponding to ma~ure vWF amino acid residues 441 t~ 732 was then amplified in a polymerase chain reaction.
For amplification, the pvWF clone encoding the entire pre-pro-vWF gene was used. Alternatively, a cDNA corresponding to mature subunit residues 441 to 732 may be prepared and then amplified directly from platelet mRNA following the procedure of Newman, P.J. et al. J. Clin. Invest., 82, 739-743 (1988).
Suitable flanking oligonucleotides were synthesized as follows:
Oligonucleotide (9) - see SEQ ID N0: 11 5' - AC GAATTC CGG CGT TTT GCC TCA GGA - 3' EcoRI Arg~Arg~2 Oligonucleotide (10) - see SEQ ID N0: 12 5' - G AAGCTT AC CAT GGA GTT CCT CTT GGG - 3' 25HindIII Met Ser Asn ~rg Lys Pro ` -or-3' - GGG~ TTC TCC TTG- AGG- TAC CA TTCGAA G - 5 ' Pro Lys Arg Asn Ser Met HindIII

~equivalent to anticoding strand) The ends of the double stranded vW~ cDNA fragment product were then modified with BamHI linkers (Roberts, R.J.
et al. Nature, 265, 82-8~ (1977)), digested with BamHI, and 35 inserted into the BamHI site of pAD1, which site is directly downstream(3') from the XbaI site. The resultant plasmid was designated pAD2.

Loopout Mutaqenesis of pAD2.

WO92/1719' PCT/~'S92/02~?~

Site-directed (loopout) mutagenesis was then performed to synchronize the reading frames of the first insert with the second insert simultaneously deleting all propeptide codon sequence (except that encoding the first 3 amino terminal residues of the propeptide), and the remaining bases between the XbaI and BamHI sites.
As a loopout primer, the following oligonucleotide was utilized which encodes the four carboxy-terminal amino acid residues of the signal peptide, the three amino-terminal residues of the propeptide, and amino acid residues 441 to 446 of the mature vWF subunit sequence.
Oligonucleotide (11) - see SEQ ID NO: 13 5' - GGGACCCTTTGTGCAGAAGGACGGCGTTTTGCCTCAGGA - 3' Arg~ Gly~
The loopout of undesired nucleotide sequence was accomplished following the procedure of Kunkel, T.A., Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 82, 488-492 ~1985). This procedure involves the performance of a series of steps to take advantage of conditions which select against a uracil containing DNA template:
(A) M13mpl8 phage (containing cDNA corresponding to the consensus translation initiation sequence, the signal peptide, approximately the first 121 amino acids of the propeptide, residual intervening M13mpl8 polylinker sequence, and codons corresponding to mature subunit sequence residues 441 to 732) is~grown in an E.coli CJ236 mutant dut~ung~ strain in a uridine rich medium. Since this E.coli strain is deficient in deoxyuridine triphosphatase (dut-), an intracellular pool of dUTP accumulates which competes with dTTP for incorporation intc DNA. (see Shlomai, J. et al. J.
Biol. Chem., 253~9), 3305-3312 (1978). Viral DNA
synthesized under these conditions includes several uracil insertions per viral genome and is stable only in an E.coli strain which is incapable of removing uracil, such as (ung~) strains which lack uracil glycosylase. Uracil-containing nucleotides are lethal in single stranded (+) M13mpl~ DNA in WO92/1719~ PCT/US9~/0247~
210710~ 92 ung~ strains due to the creation of abasic sites by uracil glycosylase.
(B~ Single-stranded (+) viral DNA is isolated from culture media in which phage were grown in E.coli strain CJ236 dut~ung~. The single stranded (+) form of the virus contains the specified vWF cDNA
at its multlple cloning site. This cDNA is equivalent to the transcribed vWF cDNA strand.
(C) Oligonucleotide (11) is then annealed in vitro to lo single stranded (+) phage DNA, thereby looping out the undesired sequence. Generally, a wide range of oligonucleotide concentrations is suitable in this procedure. Typically 40 ng of oligonucleotide was annealed to 0.5-1.0 ~g M13mpl8 phage (+) DNA.
(D) All missing sequence of the M13mpl8(~) strand is then completed in vitro using T7 DNA pol~nerase and T4 DNA ligase in an environment containing dTTP, dGTP, dATP and dCTP, thereby generating a chimeric vWF cDNA sequence without the undesired intermediate sequence.
(E) The double stranded M13mpl8 phage, now containing a thymine normal (~~ strand and a ~+) strand with several uracil substitutions, is transformed into a wild type E.coli XL-1 Blue (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) strain which contains normal lev~l~ of uracil glycosylase and deoxyuridine triphosphatase.
(F) Uracil glycosylase and other enzymes present in the new host initiàte destruction of the uracil-containing (+) strand of the double stranded phages, leading after replication in the host of remaining phage (~) strand DNA to the presence of stable thymine-normal double stranded (RF) DNA
which reflects the desired deletion. Upon completion of mutagenesis procedures, the sequence of the vWF cDNA insert was confirmed using the single stranded DNA dideoxy method. (Sanger, F. et al., ~upra).
A second mutagenesis procedure, following steps (A~ to (F~ above, was performed to add to the cDNA insert a : ' .

WO92/1719' PCT/~'S92/0247 g3 translation termination codon (TGA)) and an XbaI restriction site (TCTAGA)- The oligonucleotide, again synthesized by the phosphoramadite method and containing also sequence homology at its 3' end with the Ml3mpl8 vehicle sequence, was as follows. The stop codon was added after residue 730.
Oligonucleotide (12) - see SEQ ID NO: 14 5'- GGGCCCAAG AGG AAC-TGA-TCTAGA AAGCTTGGCACTGGC -3' Argn~sn73o XbaI
The final Ml3mpl8 recombinant containing the desired construct as a SalI - XbaI insert was designated pAD3-l. In addition to the XbaI site created 3' to the termination codon, an XbaI site exists in the polylinker region of Ml3mpl8 directly 5' to the SalI site. The vWF insert was again sequenced by the dideoxy method to verify organization and integrity of the components.

Cloning of the SalI - XbaI Fragment of pAD3-l Into the pBluescript II KS( ) Vector The SalI-XbaI fragment was then removed from pAD3-l (as contained within the XbaI-XbaI fragment) and inserted into pBluescript II KS~-) vector (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) which had baen previously digested with XbaI. pBluescript II KS(-) contains an XhoI restriction site which is 5' to the XbaI
insert and a NotI site which is directly 3' to the XbaI
insert. A resultant plasmid selected as having the proper ~5 insert orienta~ion was designated pAD3-2. Reference to the restriction map for pBluescript II KS(-) shows that an EcoRI
site is present in the polylinker region thereof between the XhoI restriction site and the XbaI site, and is therefore useful (see Example 21 below) for inserting vWF gene sequences containing Type IIB mutations into pCDM8 vectors so that stable mutant transformants can be generated.

Construction of Plasmids for Inteqration into Mammalian Cells A selection procedure, based on aminoglycosidic antibiotic resistance, was then employed to select continuously for transformants which retained the vWF
expression plasmid.

WO92/17192 s~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 pCDM8 vector (developed by B. Seed et al. Nature, 329, 840-842 tl987) and available from Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) was modified by Dr. Timothy O'Toole, Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, CA to include a neomycin resistance gene (phosphotransferase II) that was cloned into the BamHI restriction site of pCDM8 as a part of a 2000 base pair BamHI fragment. The site of the BamHI insert is indicated by an arrow in Figure 5. The protein produced by the neomycin(neo) gene also confers resistance against other aminoglycoside antibiotics such as Geneticin~ ~418 sulfate (Gibco/Life Technologies, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD). The neo gene is provided by the Tn5 transposable element and is widely distributed in procaryots. Lewin, J., Genes, 3rd ed., p.596, Wiley & Sons (1987). The final construct places the neo gene under the control of an SV40 early promoter.
Several other suitable expression vectors containing neomycin resistance markers are commercially available:
pcDNA ln~ ~Invitrogen, San Diego, CA), Rc/CMV (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) and pMAMn~ (Clontech, Palo ~lto, CA). lf necessary, the vWF fragment may be differently restricted or modified for expression capability in these other expression plasmids.
The XhoI-NotI fragment of pAD3-2 was kherefore inserted into pCDM8~ which had been restricted with XhoI and NotI.
Ampicillin sensitive E.coli strain XS-127 cells (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA~ were transformed with the resultant ligated DNA mixture following the method of Hanahan, D., J. Mol.
Biol., 166, 557-580 (1983).
Plasmids from resultant colonies were characterized by restriction mapping and DNA sequencing to identify colonies which contained the intended insert. One such appropriate plasmid (designated pAD5/WT) was maintained in E.coli strain XS-127, and was selected for mammalian cell transformation procedures.
Prior to use in trans~orming mammalian cells, supercoiled plasmids (pAD5tWT) were recovered from host E.coli by an alkaline cell lysis procedure, Birnboim, H.C.
and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids Research, 7,1513 (1979), followed by purification by CsCl/ethidium bromide equilibrium WO92/1719~ PCTt~!S92/02~7~
95 2~7~
centrifugation according to Maniatis, T. et al., Molecular Cloninq, 2nd ed., p. 1.42, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press (1987).

Transformation of Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells pAD5/WT was introduced into C~0-Kl Chinese hamster ovary cells (ATCC-CCL 61) by a standard calcium phosphate-mediated transfection procedure. Chen, C. et al. Mol. Cell. Biol., 7(8), 2745-2752 (1987).
CHo-Kl cells were grown at 37C in Dulbecco~s modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) (Gibco/Life Technologies, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (FCS), 0.5 mM of each nonessential amino acid (from NEAA supplement, Whittaker, Wal~ersville, MD) and 2 mM L-glutamine under a 5% CO2 atmosphere, and then subcultured 24 hours prior to transformation at a density of 1.5 x 105 cells per 60 mm tissue culture dish (approximately 25% of confluence). CH0-Kl cells have a doubling time in DMEM/10%FCS of approximately 16 hours under these conditions.
To accomplish transformation, pAD5/WT plasmids were recovered from cultures of E.coli strain XS-127, according to the method of Birnboim, H.C. and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids Research, 7, 1513 (1979). Ten ~g of plasmids were applied to the cells of each 60 mm dish in a calcium phosphate solution according to the method of Chen et al., supra. After inoculation with plasmid, the cells were maintained in DMEM/10% FCS for 8 hours at 37C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
The growth medium was then replaced with a solution of phosphate-buffered saline, 137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 4.3 mM
Na2HP04 7H20/1.4 mM KH2P04, pH 7.4, hereinafter "PBS", containing also 10% (v/v) glycerol. The cultures were then maintained in glycerol-PBS for 2 minutes to increase the efficiency of transformation (see Ausukel, et al., eds.
Current Protocols in Molecular Biolo~y, p.9.1.3, Wiley & Sons (1987). After 2 minutes the glycerol-PBS solution was replaced with DMEM/10% FCS.
After approximately 24 hours of growth at 37C in a 5%
C02 atmosphere, the cells were trypsinized as follows.
Growth medium for each dish was replaced by 3 ml of 0.25%

WO~2/1~197 PCT/V~92/0247~
2 1 ~
trypsin in PBS. Trypsinization was conducted ~or 3 minutes.
The trypsin-containing medium was removed and the dishes were then placed in the incubator for a further 15 minutes after which the cells were resuspended in DMEM containing lo~ fetal calf serum. The cells from each dish were then split 20 fold, and plated at a density of 3 x 104 cells/60 mm dish (approximately 5~ of confluence).
Production of stable transformants, which have integrated the plasmid DNA, was then accomplished by adding Geneticin0 G418 sulfate to the 60 mm dishes to a concentration of 0.8 mg/ml. Growth was continued ~or 10-14 days at 37C in a 5% C02 atmosphere. Surviving independent colonies were transferred to 12- well plates using cl~ning rings and then grown for another seven days in DMEM/10% FCS
supplemented with 0.8 mg/ml of Geneticin~. ~nder these conditions, 3 to 7 surviving colonies per plate were apparent after 10-14 days. Approximately 100 stable transformants can be isolated from each original 60 mM dish originally containing approximately 5 x 105 cells at a plate density of 20 - 50-70% of confluence.
Fifty to seventy percent of G418-resistant cell lines produce the 441-730 mature vWF subunit fragment. The specific geometry of integration of each clone presumably prevents expression in all cases. Stable transformants wer~
then cultured and maintained at all times in medium containing Geneticin~ G418 sulfate (.8 mg/ml) ko apply continuous selection.
Colonies expressing the recombinant 441-730 vWF
polypeptide were detected by dot-blot analysis on nitro-cellulose after lysis in disruption bu~fer (see Cullen,Methods in EnzYmoloqv, 152, 684-704 (1987)) comprising lO mM
Tris HCl, pH 7.8, 15~ mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 10 mM benzamidine, 1 mM PMSF, 1% (w/v) Non-idet 40 (an octylphenol-ethylene oxide condensate containing an average of 9 moles of ethylene oxide/mole phenol), Sigma, St. Louis, MO. RG-46 (see Fugimura, Y. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 261(1), 381-385 (1986) and Fulcher, C.A. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 1648-1652 (1982)) was used as the primary antibody. The secondary antibody (~2sI-rabbit anti-mouse IgG) which had been WO92/17192 PCT/~'S92/02~7 97 ~ ~7 ~
labelled by the method of Fraker, P.J. et al. Biochem.
Biophys. Res. Commun., 80, 8~9-857 t1978) was incubated for 60 minutes at 25C on the nitrocellulose sheet. After rinsing, the nitrocellulose was developed by autoradiography S to identify those colonies expressing the vWF fragment.

secretion of_the von Willebrand Factor Fragment Secretion of the 441-730 mature vWF subunit fragment into the culture medium by CH0-K1 cells was confirmed by immunoprecipitation and immunoaffinity chromatography of culture medium.
Confluent transformed CH0-K1 cells were rinsed three times with PBS to remove bovine vWF and then incubated in DMEM without FCS for 16 hours at 37C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
To a 5 ml volume of the culture medium was added a 1/10 volume (0.5 ml) of lOx immunoprecipitation buffer (lOxIPB) which comprises 100 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.5, 1.5 M NaCl, 10 mM
EDTA, and 10% (w/v) Non-idet 40. It has been established that bovine vWF-derived polypeptides present in fetal calf serum do not react with NMC-4.
The mixture was then incubated for 16 hours at 4C with approximately 0.05 mg of NMC-4 or 0.05 mg of RG-46 murine monoclonal anti-vWF antibody (or 0.1 mg of both) allowing formation of IgG-vWF complexes. Immune complexes were precipitated by taking advantage of the affinity of protein A
(isolated from the cell wall of Staphvlococcus aureus) for constant regions of heavy-chain antibody polypeptides following generally the method of Cullen, B. et al., Meth.
Enzymoloqy, }52, 684-704 (1987). See also Harlow, E. et al.
eds, Antibodies, A Laboratory Manual, Chapters 14-15, Cold Spring Harbor ~aboratory Press (1988).
Protein A-Sepharose~ beads were purchased from Sigma, St. Louis, M0. Immune complexes were then precipitated with the beads in the presence of 3 M NaCl/1.5 M glycine (pH B.9), and washed twice with lx IPB and then once with lx IPB
without Non-idet 40.
Immunoprecipitated proteins were then electrophoresed in polyacrylamide gels containing sodium docecyl sulfate (SDS-PAGE) following the method of Weber, K. et al., J. Biol.

WO92/17192 PCT/~'S92/02~7;
2~07100 98 _ Chem., 244, 4406-4412 ~1969), or as modified by Laemli, U.K., Nature, 227, 680-685 (1970), using an acrylamide concentration of 10%. Samples of immune-complexed vWF
protein were dissociated prior to electrophoresis by heating at lOO~C for 5 minutes in non-reducing and 2~ SDS-containing acrylamide gel sample buf~er to disrupt non-covalent bonds.
The protein A-Sepharose~4B beads were spun down and discarded. Visualization was accomplished with Coomassie blue staining which revealed the dominant vWF-derived polypeptide species to have an apparent molecular weight, based on molecular weight markers, of about 115,000 g/mol.
Protein bands in duplicate gels were blotted and immobilized onto nitrocellulose sheets (Schleicher & Schuell Co., Keene, N~) and the pat~ern was then visualized using immunoreactivity according to the hiqhly sensitive 7'Western blot" technique. Burnette, et al., A. Anal. Biochem., 112, 195-203 (1981).
The von Willebrand factor-specific monoclonal antibodies (~rom mice) used to identify the polypeptides were RG~46 (see 20 Fugimura, Y. et al. J. Biol. Chem., 261(1), 381-385 (1986), Fulcher, C.A. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 1648-1652 (1982)), and NMC-4 (Shima, M. et al., J. Nara Med.
Assoc., 36, 662 669 (1985)), both of which have epitopes within the expressed vWF polypeptide of this invention.
The secondary antibody (~ rabbit anti-mouse IgG), labelled by the method of Fraker, P.J. et al., Biochem.
Bio~hvs. Res. Commun., 80, 849-~57 (1978)), was incubated for 60 minutes at 25C on the nitrocellulose sheet. After rinsing, the sheet was developed by autoradiography.
Growth medium from non-transformed CHO-Kl cells shows no immunoreactivity with RG-46 and NMC-~ anti-vWF monoclonal antibodies under identical conditions.
The 116 kg/mol fragment may also be isolated from the culture medium of CHO-Kl cells using immunoaffinity 35 chromatography. Approximately 300~g of the 116 kg/mol fragment can be recovered from 500 ml of culture medium derived from transformed CHO-Kl culture plates using NMC-4 antibodies coupled to particles of Sepharose~4B.

WO92/1719~ PCT/US92/02~7~
gg 21~7~3~
Example 8 - Induction of platelet aggregation by the homodimeric 116 kg/mol von Willebrand factor fraqment derived from the culture medium of stable CHO-K1 transformants The tryptic 116 kg/mol fragment has been previously characterized as a dimer consisting of two identical disulfide-linked subunits each correspond~ing to the tryptic 52/48 kg/mol fragment of vWF and containing the mature subunit sequence from residue 449 to residue 728. Owing to its bivalent character, the dimeric 116 kg/mol fragment can support ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation whereas the constituent 52/48 kg/mol subunit cannot (see Mohri, ~. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(29), 17361-17367 (1989)).
Stable pAD5/WT CHO-K1 transformants, and untransformed CHO-K1 cells as controls, were each grown to 90% of confluence in DMEM/10% FCS, at 37C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
The 60 mm plates were then rinsed twice with PBS and the incubation was continued in DMEM (without FCS) for 24 hours.
The resultant serum-free culture medium was collected and concentrated (at 18C) 300 fold in a centrifugation-filtration apparatus, Centricon 30, Amicon Co., Lexington, Dose-dependent platelet aggregation curves were obtained by the addition of concentrated culture medium from pADS/WT
transformed cells to platelets. No aggregation was seen in the presence of control culture medium derived from untransformed CHO-K1 cells. Platelets for the assay were prepared using albumin density gradients according to the procedure of Walsh, et al. British J. of Hematoloqy, 36, 281-298 (1977). Aggregation was monitored in siliconized glasscuvettes maintained at 37C with constant stirring (1200 rpm) in a Lumi-aggregometer (Chrono-Log Corp., Havertown, PA).
Aggregation experiments followed generally the procedure of Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(29), 17361-17367 ~1989). Two to ten ~l quantities of 300-fold concentrated FCS-free DMEM from cultures of pAD5/WT-transformed and control untransformed CHO-K1 cells (CM) were brought up to 100 ~l by dilution with "Hepes" buffered saline, comprising 20 mM Hepes, N-[2-hydroxyethyl]piperazine-NL[2-ethanesulfonic acid]l (pH 7.4), and 0.15 M NaCl. The 100 ~l W092/1719~ PCT/US92/02~7~
~ 1~7 1~ ~ loo samples were then mixed with 200 ~1 of platelet suspension (4x 108/ml) and then incubated with stirring in the aggregometer for 5 minutes. Ristocetin was then added to a final concentration of lmg/ml at the injection timepoints ttime zero). Aggregation was monitored by recording changes in light transmittance. Platelet aggregation can be observed with as little as 100 ~1 of unconcentrated serum-free medium from pAD5/WT-transformed cell lines. Serum-free medium from control untransformed cultures concentrat:ed up to 300 fold, and assayed at up to 10 ~1 concentrated medium/100 ~1 sample did not induce platelet aggregation.

Preincubation with Monoclonal Antibodies As a further control to confirm the specificity of the ristocetin-induced 116 kg/mol vWF fragment-platelet interaction, platelets were preincubated with anti-platelet glycoprotein Ib monoclonal antibody LJ-Ibl which has been specifically demonstrated to block vWF-platelet GPIb-IX
receptor interaction (Handa, et al., J. Biol. Chem., 261, 12579-1~585 (1986)).
Platelets subjected to this preincubation did not exhibit an aggregation response whereas platelets similarly preincubated with monoclonal antibody LJ-CP3 (Trapani-Lombardo et al., J. Clin. Invest., 76, 1950-1958 (1985) gave an effective aggregation response. LJ-CP3 has been demonstrated to block platelet GPIIb/IIIa receptor sites and not vWF-specific GPIb-IX receptors. To perform the assays antibody LJ-Ibl or antibody LJ-CP3 was added, at a concentration of 100 ~g/ml, to the platelet/serum mixture while the mixture was being stirred in the aggregometer, and at a timepoint one minute prior to the point when ristocetin (to 1 mg/ml) was added.

Example 9 - Construction of a mammalian transformant for the expression of the monomeric 441-730 mature von Willebrand factor subunit fragment with cysteine-to-glycine mutations at residues 459 462 and 464 This example is illustrative of conditions under which a DNA sequence encoding a mature vWF subunit fragment, which WO92/17192 2 ~ ~ 7 ~ ~ i3 PCT/~'S92/0217 has an amino terminus at resldue 441 (arginine) and a carboxy terminus at residue 730 (asparagine) and which further contains glycine residues substituted for cysteine residues at positions 459, 462 and 464 thereof, can be constructed and transfected into mammalian cells.
The SalI-XbaI insert of pAD3-2 (see Example 7) was removed by restriction and then cloned into pcDNAl vector (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) which had been previously digested with XhoI and XbaI restriction enzymes. Since XhoI
and SalI restriction sites contain identical internal sequences -TCGA- / -AGCT- , a SalI restricted fragment may be annealed into an XhoI site. The fragments were ligated with T4 DNA ligase; however the integrity of the XhoI site was not restored. This plasmid construct was designated pAD4/WT.

Site-directed mutaqenesis usinq Ml3mpl8 pAD4/~T was restricted with EcoRI and SmaI enzymes.
pcDNAl vector contains an EcoRI site within its polylinker region which is upstream from the XhoI ("SalI") s:ite but contains no SmaI site. As shown in Figure l (SEQ ID NO: l), a unique SmaI site (CCCGGG) is contained within the vWF cDNA
insert, spanning mature subunit residues 716 (glycine) to residue 718 (glycine).
Accordingly, an approximate 950 base pair EcoRI-SmaI
2S fragment of pAD4/WT was subcloned into the EcoRI-SmaI site within the polylinker region of Ml3mpl8 phage. The vWF
sequence in Ml3mpl8 was then mutagenized and reinserted into the previously restricted pAD4/WT construct leading to reassembly of the intact residue 441-730 vWF sequence.
The mutagenesis followed the procedure of Example l and Kunkel, T.A., supra, and utilized the following oligonucleotide.
..

W092/1719~ PCT/~'~92/0247~
21V7~ 102 ~-Oligonucleotide ~13) - see SEQ ID No: 15 3' - GGACTCGTGCCGGTCTAA_CGGTGCCACTACAACAG - 5' 5' - cctgagcacqqccagatt qccacqqtgatgttgtc - 3' Gly459 Gly462 Gly4~
The hybridizing oligonucleotide is shown (3' - 5') in capital letters and is equivalent to transcribed strand (non-coding strand DNA). Underlined letters indicate the single base mutations for the mutant codons. The equivalent coding strand is shown in lower case letters with the corresponding glycine substitutions identified by three letter designation.
The mutant 950 base pair EcoRI-SmaI fragment was then re-inserted into the EcoRI-SmaI site of the previously restricted pAD4/WT plasmid. The mutant construct was designated pAD4/~3C. To facilitate long-term storage and propagation, pAD4/A3C was transformed into ampicillin sensitive E.coli strain XS-127 according to the method of Hanahan, D., J. Mol. Biol., 166, 557-580 (1983).
Consistent with the procedures of Example l, the sequence of the mutant cDNA was confirmed by the dideoxy method and the plasmid was purified by CsCl/ethidium bromide equilibrium centrifugation.

pAD4/a3C was introduced into COS-l cells (SV 40 transformed African Green monkey kidney cells, ATCC - CRL
1650) by a standard calcium phosphate-mediated transfection procedure. Chen, C. et al., Mol. Cell. Biol., 7(8), 2745-2752 (1987).
COS-l cells were grown at 37C in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) (Gibco/Life Technologies, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) under a 5% CO2 atmosphere, and then subcultured 24 hours prior to transformation at a density of l.5 x lO5 cells/60 mm tissue culture dish (approximately 25~ of confluence). COS-l cells have a doubling time in DMEM/10%
FCS of approximately 20 hours under these conditions.
To accomplish transformation, pAD4/~3C plasmids were recovered from cultures of E.coli strain XS-127 according to the method of Birnboim, H.C. and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids WO92/1719~ 7 ~ ~ ~ P~T/~S92/02~7 Research, 7, 1513 (1979). Ten ~g of plasmids were applied to the cells of each 60 mm dish in a calcium phosphate solution according to the method of Chen et al., supra. After inoculation with plasmid, the cells were maintained in DMEM/10% FCS for 8 hours at 37C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
The growth medium was then replaced with a solution of phosphate-buffered saline/10% (v/v) glycerol. The cultures were then maintained in glyoerol-PBS for 2 minutes to facilitate the production of transformants (Ausukel, et al.
eds, Current Protocols in Molecular Bioloqv, p.9.1.3, Wiley &
Sons (1987)). After 2 minutes, the glycerol-PBS solution was replaced with DMEM/10% FCS. Antibiotic resistance was not used to select for stable transformants. The cells were then maintained at 37C in DMEM/10% FCS in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.

Example 10 - Transformation of COS-1 cells by pAD4/WT plasmids COS-l ce~ls were also transformed successfully with pAD4/WT plasmids. Although antibiotic resistance was not used to select ~or stable transformants, transient expression of the 116 kg/mol fragment therefrom was particularly useful for the purpose of comparing the properties of the 116 kg/mol mutagenized polypeptide produced by pAD4/~3C plasmids to those o~ the pAD4/WT 116 kg/mol homodimer.
Following the procedures of Example 9, pAD4/WT plasmids were recovered from storage cultures of E.coli strain XS-127.
Transformation of COS-1 cells with pAD4/WT was then accomplished using the procedures of Example 9. The cells were then maintained at 37C in DMEM/10% FCS in a 5% CO2 atmosphere.

Example 11 - Construction of mammalian transformants which express mutant 441-730 mature von Willebrand factor subunit fragments wherein each mutant contains a single cYsteine-to-qlycine substitution Following the procedures of Example 9, and using suitable oligonucleotides for site-directed mutagenesis, three plasmids (pAD4/G459, pAD4/G452 and pAD4/G464, collectively referred to as "pAD4/AlC plasmids") were constructed. Such plasmids are identical to pAD4/WT except that each contains a W092/1719~ 7 ~ ~3 9 PCT/US~2/02~7~

single base pair mutation which corresponds to a single cysteine to glycine substitution at mature vWF subunit residue positions 459, 462 and 46~ respectively. The oligonucleotides used are identical to oligonucleotide (13) used to prepare pAD4/A3C except that each contains only one of the three mutant codons of that oligonucleotide, the other two codons being represented by the wild type coding sequence. To facilitate long-term storiage and propagation, samples of pAD4/G459, pAD4/G462, and pAD4/~ were each cloned into ampicillin sensitive E.coli strain XS-127 following the method of Example 9.
Consistent with the procedures of ~xample 9, the sequences of the mutant cDNAs were confirmed by the dideoxy method and the plasmids were purified by CsCl/ethidium bromide equilibrium centrifugation.
Transformation of COS-1 cells with either pAD4/G459, pAD4/G462 or pAD4/G4~ plasmids was accomplished according to the protocol of Example 9. Antibiotic resistance was not used to select for stable transformants. The cells were then 20 maintained at 37C in DMEM/10% FCS in a 5~ CO2 atmosphere.

Example 12 - Expression and characterization of von Willebrand factor subunit fragments by COS-l cells transformed with pAD4/WT and pAD41a3C plasmids COS-1 cells which had been transformed with pAD4/A3c or pAD4/WT plasmids according to the procedures of Examples 9 and 10 respectively were cultured to express the encoded vWF
DNA as explained below. COS-1 cells similarly transformed with pcDNA1 plasmid vector (not containing a vWF CDNA insert) were used as controls.
COS-l cells at a density of 4-5 x 105/60 mm dish were transformed by adding, at time zero, 10 ~g of pAD4/WT, pAD4/~3C or pcDNAl plasmid. Following the procedure of Examples 9 and 10, the cells were glycerol-shocked after a period of 8 hours. The cells were then covere~ with DMEM/10%
FCS at 37C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere for 32 hours.
The cells for each culture were then rinsed three times with PBS and the incubation was continued with DMEM (without ~CS) which was supplemented with 35S-methionine (Amersham Co., WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 Arlington Heights, IL) having a specific activity of l000 Ci/mmol to a final concentration of l00 ~Ci/ml. The cells were returned to the incubator for 16 hours, after which time the respective culture media were harvested for purification by immunoprecipitation of secreted vWF polypeptid~s.
Immunoprecipitation followed generally the procedure of Example 7. Five ml volumes of culture media were incubated with 0.5 ml of l0X immunoprecipitation buffer, 0.05 mg of NMC-4 antibody and 0.05 mg of R~-46 antibody for 16 hours.
Treatment with protein A-Sepharose~4B was performed according to Example 7. Samples of IgG-complexed vWF protein were dissociated prior to SDS-PAGE in SDS-containing sample buffer.
For analysis of the vWF polypeptides under reducing conditions, the sample buffer was modified to contain l00 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT).

Results IThe gels run under reducing and non-reducing conditions were dried and subject to autoradiography to develop the 35S
label. No 35S-labelled protein was detected as an immunoprecipitate derived from control cultures of COS-l cells (transformed by unmodified pcDNAl vehicle~ under either reducing or non-reducing conditions.
COS-l cells transformed with pAD4/WT plasmids produce, under non-reducing conditions, a prominent 35S-labelled band of an approximate apparen~t molecular weight of 116,000. This value is consistent wikh proper mammalian glycosylation of the 441-730 fragment. When run under reducing conditions, no 116 kg/mol material is apparent, consistent with the reduction o~ the disulfide bonds which stabilize the 116 Xg/mol homodimer. Under reducing conditions, a prominent 35S-labelled band is visualized of approximately 52,000 apparent molecular weight. The apparent 52 kg/mol value is again consistent with proper glycosylation of the reduced monomeric 441-730 fragment.
The gel lanes corresponding to transformation with pAD4/a3C show no apparent 116 kg/mol material. Instead a WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/0247~
7~ ~ 106 band is apparent, under reducing and non-reducing conditions, at an apparent molecular weight of approximately 52,000.
Thus, mutagenesis to replace cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 within the 441-730 vWF fragment with glycine residues results in the successful expression of a non-dimerizing polypeptide presumably having only intrachain ~471 to 474 and 509 to 695) disulfide bonds. Interaction with NMC-4 (see also Example 7) is known to require an intact 509 to 695 intrachain disulfide bond, thereby demonstrating the presence of native wild type tertiary structure in the polypeptide produced by pAD4/~3C.
The presence in the gels of low molecular weight 35S-labelled material (under reducing and non-reducing conditions) probably indicates that not all vWF polypeptides produced by pAD4/WT constructs successfully dimerize and that proteolysis and/or incomplete glycosylation of the polypeptide may prevent higher yields. Proteolysis and/or incomplete glycosylation also presurnably affect the yield of the monomeric vWF polypeptide produced by the pAD4/~3C
transformants. Some high molecular weight aggregate material (essentially not entering the gels) is present in non-reduced samples from pAD4/WT and pAD4/~3C.

Exam le l3 - Use of NMC-4 monoclonal antibody to immunoprecipitate vWF polypeptides secreted by pAD4/WT and pAD4/A3c transformed COS-l cells The NMC-4 monoclonal antibody has as its epitope the domain of the von Willebrand factor subunit which contains the glycoprotein Ib binding site. Mapping of the epitope has demonstrated that it is contained within two discontinuous domains (comprising approximately mature vWF subunit residues 474 to 488 and also approximately residues 694 to 708) brought into disulfide-dependent association by an intrachain (residues 509 to 695) disulfide bond.
Thus, reactivity with NMC-4 is important evidence of whether a particular recombinant 441-730 mature vWF subunit fragment has assumed the tertiary structure of the analogous wild type residue 441-730 domain.

J~
WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 Accordingly, the procedure of Example 12 was followed to characterize vWF polypeptides secreted by pAD4/WT and pAD4/~3C transformed COS-1 cells, with the modification that immunoprecipitation of the culture media was effected solely with NMC-4 antibody (O.05 mg NMC-4 per 5 ml of culture media to which 0.5 ml of 10X immunoprecipitat:ion buffer had-been added).
Samples were run under reducing and non-reducing conditions. Consistent with the results of Example 12, the major component isolated from pAD4/WT culture medium has an apparent molecular weight of 116 kg/mol under non-reducing conditions and 52 kg/mol under reducing conditions.
Although only a small fraction of the total pAD4/~3C
derived vWF polypeptide material binds to NMC-4 (compared to conformation independent RG-46), a band of apparent molecular weight of 52 kg/mol is visible under reducing and non-reducing conditions in gels of NMC-4 immunoprecipitates~

Example 14 - Expression and characterization of von Willebrand factor subunit fragments produced by COS-l cells transformed with ~AD4/G459, pAD4/G462 or PAD4/G~ plasmids Transformation of COS-1 cells by either pAD4/G459, pAD4~G~2 or pAD4/G4~ plasmid (collectively the '~pAD4/~lC
plasmids") was accomplished according to the procedure of Example 1~. Culture media were analyzed for secreted vWF
polypeptide according to the procedure of Example 7, using only NMC-4 for immunoprecipitation.
35S-labelled proteins, prepared according to Example 12, were immunoprecipitated by NMC-4 and run in SDS-polyacrylamide gels under reducing and non-reducing conditions and compared with vWF antigen produced by pAD4/WT
and pAD4/A3C transformants. Substitution of any one of the 3 cysteines (459, 462, 464) believed responsible for interchain disulfide contacts in native mature subunits prevents the formation of the homodimeric 116 kg/mol polypeptide characteristic of pAD4/WT transformed COS-1 cells. These three vWF antigens with a single glycine substitution appear predominantly as monomeric polypeptides of an apparent molecular weight of 52,000 under reducing or WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 ~ ~7 1~ a 108 non-reducing conditions. That the predominant material has an apparent molecular weight of 52 kg/mol is strongly suggestive of correct glycosylation by the COS-1 cell transformants duplicating glycosylation seen in the human 52/~8 kg/mol tryptic vWF fragment. Some proteolyzed and/or inadequately glycosylated vWF antigen (molecular weight less than 52 kg/mol) is also apparent in the gels. The relatively small fraction of pAD4/A3C vWF polypeptide which is successfully folded and secreted, thereby presenting an NMC-4 epitope, was shown by the low intensity of the pAD4/~3C
transformant autoradiograph band of apparent 52,000 molecular weight.

II. Introduction of Type IIB Mutations into vWF PolypePtides Example 15 - Genetic characterization of patients with Type IIB von Willebrand disease This example demonstrates the procedure used to identify the mutation(s) in the mature von Willebrand factor subunit responsible for Type IIB von Willebrand disease in particular patients. Patients selected for screening were previously determined to ~ulfill all of the criteria for a diagnosis of Type IIB von Willebrand disease. See Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., N. ~nal. J. Med., 302, 1047-1051 (1980).
The propositus determined to have a vWF gene with a Trp550 _ Cys550 mutation is identified as patient No. 7 in the study reported in Kyrle, P.A. et al., Br. J. Hemat., 69, 55-59 ~1988~. The propositus determined to have a vWF gene with an Arg5~ Trpsll mutation ïs identified as patient No. 8 in the same study. Samples of blood were drawn from patients after obtaining informed consent according to the Declaration of Helsinki and institutional guidelines.
Platelets were collected from 50 ml of blood drawn into a 5 ml volume of 3.Z% trisodium citrate as anticoagulant.
The residual total platelet RNA was then isolated by ultracentrifugation through a cesium chloride cushion following the procedure of Newman, P.J. et al., J._Clin.
Invest., 82, 739-743 ~1988).
To generate double stranded cDNA, standard techniques were used. Total platelet RNA was primed for first-strand WO 92/1719'~ , r~ 7'Cr/1,~592/0247' cDNA synthesis with a vWF-specific oligonucleotide corresponding to the non-coding strand (transcribed strand) for mature vWF subunit residues 899-908.

Oligonucleotide (14) - see SEQ ID N0: 16 3' GGA CTG GAC CAC GAC GTC TCC ACG ACG AGG TTCGAA 5-' Pro Ser HindIII
8g9 908 The primed vWF mRNA population was then used as template for reverse transcriptase (from Moloney murine leukemia virus, Gibco/Bethesda Research Laboratories, Gaithersburg, MD) according to the procedure of Maniatis, T. et al., Molecular_Clonina, 2 ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY (1989). The RNA strands were then removed by alkaline hydrolysis and the first strand cDNA
was primed for second strand synthesis using DNA polymerase I
and then amplified iII a polymerase chain reaction ("PCR") as described in Example 1 using oligonucleotide 14, and also oligonucleotide 15 (equivalent to coding strand, non-transcribed strand DNA, corresponding to amino acid residues 20- 428-436).

Oligonucleotide ~15) - see SEQ ID N0: 17 5' GAATTC GTT GAC CCT GAA GAC TGT CCA GTG TGT 3' EcoRI Val Cys The product of a vWF pseudogene (said gene having an intron-exon arrangement similar to that of the functional gene within the region thereof corresponding to the mRNA
region selected for amplification) was avoided in the PCR
reaction by selecting priming oligonucleotides complementary to exons 23 and 24 ~Mancuso, D.J. et al., ~. Biol. Chem., 264, 19514-19527 (1989)) which are separated in the ~ functional gene by a 2000 base pair intron. Amplified DNA of - the predicted length was therefore verified to be derived fro~ platelet cDN~ and not from genomic DNA corresponding to small quantities of leukocytes or other cells which ~ay have contaminated the platelet preparation.
The amplified 1.4 kilobase cDNA fragment corresponding to mature subunit residues 428-908 was then subjected to further rounds of PCR amplification which split the fragment WO92/1719~ % 10 7 ~ O ~ PCT/US92/0247 into two smaller overlapping cDNA regions (corresponding to amino acid residues 440-670 and 660-905) to facilitate sequence analysis.
Priming oligonucleotides therefor were synthesized (according to the method of Example 1) to correspond approximately to the first twenty nucleotides on the 5' (upstream) and 3' (downstream) ends of each of the two overlapping fragments and contained also either an EcoRI (if 5') or HindIII (if 3') restriction sequence so that the amplified 440-670 or 660-905 sequances so prepared could be inserted into M13mpl8 phage for sequencing. Resultant double stranded vWF cDNA corresponding to the residue 440-670 or 660-905 fragment was then inserted into the multiple cloning site of the double stranded replicative form of bacteriophage M13mpl8 using EcoRI and Hind III restriction enzymes, and then sequenced by the single-stranded dideoxy method (Example 1, Sanger, F. supra) one patient was found to have a mutation at the codon corresponding to mature subunit residue 550 that specified a Trp to Cys mutation (5 TGG3 ~5TGC3). The transversion mutation destroys an AvaII restriction site overlapping codons for residues 550-552 of the mature subunit. Absence of the restriction site was confirmed in the patient's genomic DN~. Another patient was found to have a mutation at the codon corresponding to mature subunit residue 511 specifying an Arg to Trp mutation (sAGG3 ~ 5TGG3). Both patients were found to be heterozygous for their particular amino acid substitutions, a finding consistent with the autosomal dominant mode of inheritance seen in most Type IIB
patients. Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., N. Enal. J. Med., 302, 1047-10~1 (1980).
In the event the mutation or mutations responsible for the altered properties o~ the mature vWF subunit from other particular Type IIB patients cannot be resolved into the above region of the mRNA, corresponding to residues 428-908, other regions may be selected for study using suitable oligonucleotides with reference to the published DNA sequence for the vWF gene.

~, P ~ J
WO92/1719' PCT/~IS92/02~7 Example 16 - Mutagenesis of peptide subdomains of vWF to create additional vWF-derived polypeptides havinq T~p_ IIB-like proPerties It has been demonstrated that the GPIb(~) binding domain of vWF is formed primarily by residues contained in two discontinuous sequences, comprising approximately Cys474-Pro488 and approximately Leu5~-Pro708 maintained in proper conformation in native vWF by disulflde bonding. Mohri, H.
et al., J. Biol. Chem., 263(34), 17901-17904 (1988). It has also been demonstrated that an intrachain disulfide bond which is necessary to provide that conformation is formed by cysteine residues 509 and 695 (U.S. Application Serial No.
07/600,183, filed October 17, 1990 and Examples 1-6 reported herein). The present development provides substantial evidence that the "loop" region of the mature vWF subunit (between residues 509 and 695) modulates the binding properties toward GPIb~ of the above mentioned primary sequence regions of vWF. The following methods are representative of techniques which can be employed to (A) identify within the "loop" region of vWF further potentially important primary sequence subdomains or specific amino acids involved in modulating binding of vWF to GPIb~; and/or (B) create artificial vWF-derived polypeptide sequences with altered modulating or binding activity.

Method 1 Random mutagenesis of the "loop"
to generate antithrombotic or antihemorrhaqic thera~eutic ~olypeptides Using vWF DNA from plasmid p5E (which encodes the amino acid sequence comprising mature subunit residues 441 to 733 in which the cysteine residues at positions 459, 462, 464, 471 and 474 thereof are replaced by ~lycine residues), and random mutant oligonucleotides which will sequentially span the entire 187 amino acid "loop", novel variant DNA sequences can be constructed which encode variant vWF-derived polypeptides. Resultant potential therapeutic polypeptides can be screened for relative binding affinity (1) in direct hinding assays for affinity to GPIb~, or (2) in botrocetin or ristocetin induced binding assays, or (3) to conformation dependent vWF-specific antibodies. Random mutagenesis PCT/~IS92/02~7~
'~10711~ 112 experiments can also be performed using vWF DNA constructs suitable for expression in mammalian cells such as those of Example 7.

Preparation of Oligonucleotides Mutant oligonucleotides suitable for site directed mutagenesis protocols and spanning sequential 10 amino acid subdomains of the loop (for example corresponding to amino acids 510 - 519, 520 - 529, 530 - 539) can be generated using a procedure designed to yield a randomly mutagenized oligonucleotide population. Hutchison, C.A. et al., Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 83, 710-714 (1986). The randomized vWF oligonucleotide is then hybridized, for example, to M13mpl8 to copy the mutation into a residue 441-733 encoding DNA sequence. The method of Hutchison, C.A. et al.
relies on automated synthesis of the oligonucleotide from the 3' end. In the Hutchison procedure, a random oligonucleotide population suitable for causing permutation of the residues between positions 504 and 524 of the mature vWF subunit would be constructed as follows. The oligonucleotide corresponds to transcribed strand DNA. As the chain is then built stepwise by the nonenzymatic 3'~5' addition of subsequent bases (comprising the part of the vWF loop region to be surveyed), each of the four nucleoside phosphoramidite reservoirs (A,T,G,C) for oligonucleotide synthesis would be "doped" with a small amount of each of the other three bases.
Incorporation of one of the "doping" nucleotides would result in a mutant oligonucleotide~ The amount of doping can be adjusted to control results. The resultant xandomized population of mutant oligonucleotides is then used in the standard site directed mutagenesis protocol (Example 1) to construct a pool of mutagenized vWF "loop" DNA sequences in M13mpl8 corresponding to the mature vWF subunit residue 441-733 fragment and suitable for subcloning into a bacterial expression system.
It is possible to control the number of mutations per molecule by controlling the composition of the base mixtures.
For example, it is possible to select for only single base pair substitutions or to select for molecules which have 2, WO92/1719~ CT/~'S92/02~7 3, 4, or more muta~ions. The procedure developed by Hutchison, supra typically employed solutions of each of the four bases in which approximately l.5% impurity of each of the other three bases contaminates the original base solutions. Mutagenesis using this particular doped mixture resulted in roughly 4l~ of clones with no base substitutions, 40% with one, 15% with two, 3% with three and 0.7% with four ~for target nucleotide sequences corresponding to lO amino acids).
The resultant mutant Ml3mpl8 populations are then subject to restriction (Example l), and the mutagenized DNA
sequences are inserted into vectors or plasmids such as pET-3A for expression in host bacterial cells. Large scale screening of ~ammalian clones is generally much more difficult than for bacterial clones. However, promising mutations identified in bacterial constructs may later be inserted into mammalian or other eucaryotic host cells for ~urther testing or for commercial-scale polypeptide production.
The mutant clones can then be screened in GPIb~ binding assays or in binding assays with vWF-specific monoclonal antibodies (as described below). Mutant clones having cell lysates which exhibit enhanced platelet binding or antibody response can be sequenced to determine the amino acid alteration(s) responsible for the mutant phenotype. In this way a very systematic analysis of the loop region of vWF can be performed and mutations which alter the binding of vWF to GPIb~ can be identified.
The mutagenesis techniques of Method l above is equally applicable to permuting the amino acid sequence regions o~
the mature subunit believed to represent the actual GPIb binding site ~Leu469-Asp498 and Glu589-Val7~3) for the purpose of enhancing their GPIb~ affinity.

Method_2 Random mutation of targeted subdomains to develop therapeutic polypeptides To date, five residue positions within the residue 44l-733 region of mature vWF subunit have been identified which when appropriately mutated result in potentiation of platelet WO92/1719~ PCT/~S92/0217~
7~0 114 aggrsgation response and with Type IIB disease. These sites are at amino acid positions 5~1 (Arg~Trp), 543 (Arg~Trp), 550 (Trp-Cys), 553 (Val~Met), and also posslbly 561 (Gly~Asp).
(The patient with a mutation at position 561 exhibits some Type IIB-like disease symptoms, namely enhanced platelet aggregation with low doses of ristocetin and was treated at the Greene Hospital of Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, CA). Since the known mutations indicate primary se~uence subdomains wherein Type IIB
properties can be generated, random mutagenesis of the DN~
corresponding to short peptide sequences directly adjacent to these particular sites would be emphasized. Randomly mutagenized oligonucleotides, prepared and used as described above, and which span domains of approximately lO amino acids adjacent to residues 510, 520, 530, 540, 550, 56~, 570 and 580 can be utilized.

Method 3 Mutagenesis o~ speci~ic target amino acids to develop therapeutic polypeptides Two o~ the known mutations which correlate with Type IIB
von Willebrand disease result in replacement of a wild type codon, encoding a positively charged amino acid, with a codon corresponding to a neutral residue. It is probable that the electrical charge of particular subdomains in the "loop" must be maintained for proper in vivo function (i.e. preventing interaction of GPIb~ with circulating multimeric plasma vWF
until vascular injury triggers a sequence of events resulting in a con~ormational change in the vWF molecule or its GPIb~
receptor). P~sitively charged amino acids that are proximal to arginine residues 511 and 543 can also be specifical}y mutated to code for amino acids which are neutral or possess, at physiological pH, negatively changed side chains. In addition, Type IIB disease-conferring neutral mutant codons such as Trp~3, may be replaced by codons for other neutral or negatively charged amino acids. Representative further target amino acid sites predicted to yield mutant polypeptides having Type IIB properties and resultant therapeutic utility include the arginine residues at positions 524, 545, 552, 571, 573, 578 and 579, the lysine WO 92/1 71 9'~ 3 ~ p~/1 !S~2/02~7 residues at positions 534 and 549 and the histidine residues at positions 559 and 563.

Method 4 Generation of additional mutant oligonucleotide constructs havinq therapeutic activitY
There are numerous additional mutagenesis stratagies which can be used to probe the specific structural features and amino acid sequence requirements therefor which confer upon the vWF loop region the ability to modulate GPIb~
binding. Such strategies are also useful in constructing vWF-derived polypeptides containing, for example, mutant loop regions which are useful as therapeutics. Representative, additional mutagenesis strategies are hereafter described.
In the practice of this invention, effective substitutions need not be made at the exact residue positions corresponding to the targeted wild type residues. For example, substitution of cysteine for Lys~9 or Val55~ or for other nearby residues instead of for Trp550 may be performed, with the resultant polypeptides being subjected to screening for therapeutic utility.
Table 2 presents representative examples of potentially useful amino acid substitutions, deletions and additions which accomplish net reduction of positive charge at or adjacent to specific sites. Similar strategies can be employed at or adjacent to other specific residues of vWF to accomplish net reduction of negative charge or to break or for~ a hydrogen bond, salt bridge, or hydrophobic contact.

WO92/1719~ PCT/USg~/02~7~
~l 071~ 116 Table 2 with respect to the sequence: Ser Arg Leu -a substitution of a neutral for Arg5~ ~ a neutral residue or negatively charged residue: such as {;ly, Ser, Asn, Ala, or Gln5~l, or, for example, Asp an insertion of a negatively Arg5ll Asp Leu5~2 charged residue:

10 a deletion of a positively Cys Ser Leu charged residue: 510 512 Cloned vWF polypeptide constructs reflecting known Type IIB mutations may also be subject to the above mentioned random mutagenesis procedures and then screened for restoration of normal binding function such as, for example, having a normal response in a modulator-induced GPlb~ binding assay. For example, it may be demonstrated that a particular "reversion" mutation proximal to residue 511 would compensate for, and nullify the effect of the original Arg~Trp5~l Type IIB mutation. The associated DNA sequence can then be determined to identify the relevant counteracting amino acid.
Such procedures can be used to give important further evidencP as to which other residue positions in the mature subunit vWF amino acid sequence are important modulators of GPIb~ binding.
Screening of mutant vWF-derived ~olypeptides ~or enhanced GPIb~ bindinq activity There is hereafter presented an effective method to screen randomly mutagenized mature vWF subunit polypeptide ~equences for enhanced GPIb~ binding activity, and resultant enhanced therapeutic utility.
To perform the assays, a device used for the enzyme-linked immunofiltration assay technique (ELIF~), Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, IL, can be adapted in combination with immobilization of the mutant vWF-derived polypeptides to be tested. It is considered most e~ficient to initially test the effect of mutant codons on vWF polypeptides expressed WO 92/1719~ 3pCT/~92/0247 from bacterial constructs and to then copy potentially useful mutations (using, for example, mutagenesis in M13mpl8 vehicle and the procedure of Example 22) into a mammalian expression construct. High levels of mutant vWF polypeptides correspondin~ to mutant DNA sequences c~n be expressed from pET-3A type bacterial expression plasmids such as p5E.
Mutant polypeptides constitute a major portion of host E.coli cell lysates and can be readily screened for GPIb~ affinity.
Accordingly, site directed mutagenesis can be performed following the procedure of Example 1 usin~ as template in M13mpl8 the vWF fragment corresponding to p5E expression plasmid (Example 4) which because of the use of BamHI linkers in assembly of p5E is recovered therefrom and inserted into M13mpl8 as an XbaI/HindIII fragment (see Example 17). For the oligonucleotide pool, oligonucleotides each having randomly mutagenized residue 505 to 524 sequences are used.
The mutagenized population of M13mpl8 constructs can be cloned into pET-3A plasmids a~ter which the expression plasmids can be transformed into E.coli BL21 (DE3) following the procedure of Example l. Preparation of mutant polypeptide extracts from E.coli BL21(DE3) for screening follows the procedure of Example l with the final step being solubilization of extracted inclusion body material with 8 M
urea at room temperature for 2 hours.
Resultant extracts of expressed mutant p5E-type vWF
polypeptidas are immobilized following the manufacturer's instructions onto a nitrocellulose membrane (0.45~ pore size) using 96-well sample application plates (Easy-Titer0 ELIFA
System, Pierce Co., Rock~ord, IL) and a vacuum chamber.
Commercially available pump materials can be used. The apparatu~ is suitable for screening large series of clone lysates in an EhIFA or dot blot system and allows also quantitative transfer of sample fluids to underlying microtiter wells without cross contamination.
Immobilization of the vWF polypeptides is accomplished by causing a suitable volume, such as 200 ~l, of each resuspended inclusion body pellet material (in 8 M urea) to be ~acuum-drawn through the individual wells to the nitrocellulose membrane over a 5 minute period. Several 200 O92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 s~ 118 ~l volumes of Hepes-buffered saline are then drawn through the membrane to remove urea.
The protein binding capacity of the membrane is then saturated by passing through it three consecutive 200 ~l aliquots of HEPES/BSA buffer herein comprising 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, and 1~ wtv bovine serum albumin (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA).
After completion of the above procedure to minimize background caused by nonspecific interaction, a 50 ~l volume of HEPES/BSA containing botrocetin (at approximately 0.5 ~g/ml) or containing ristocetin ( at approximately 1 mg/ml) can be vacuum drawn through the nitrocellulose membrane again over a 5 minute period. The ristocetin-induced precipitation of bacterially-expressed vWF polypeptides observed under some test conditions is not expected to cause difficulty in this assay as the polypeptide is already immobilized.
GPIb(~) represented by its external domain, glycocalicin, or the 45 kg/mol tryptic fragment thereof is next applied to the nitrocellulose using the vacuum system and the 96-well plate. The GPIb~ fragments are purified and ~iodinated by standard procedures. Vicente, V. et al., J.
Biol. Chem., 265, 274-280 (1990). 50 ~l aliquots of HEPES/BSA containing 12sI-GPIb~ fragments (0.25 ~g/ml having a recommended specific activity of between approximately 5X108 and approximately 5x109 cpm/mg) can then be vacuum drawn through the nitrocellulose filter over 5 minutes.
The membrane is then allowed to dry and discs corresponding to the position of each application well are cut out and counted in a ~ scintillation spectrometer to determine bound radioactivity. An autoradiograph of the membrane can also be obtained before cutting out the discs in order to ascertain that there was no leakage of radioactivity from one well to another. The counting process may be facilitated by scanning the developed autoradiogram in a densitometer to digitize the intensity of developed spots.
As long as the autoradiogram is not excessively overdeveloped, beyond the linear region of response, useful qualitative results are obtained.

fl~ JL V; ~ U V
WO 92/1 71 9' PCr/l_lS92tO2~7:`

An alternate procedure to derive from individual host E.coli clones an impure extract which can be screened in immunoblot or dotblot procedures is as follows. A large set of individual E.coli colonies carrying separate randomly mutagenized vWF inserts is picked and grown overnight as separate cultures. The cultures are then diluted 1:100 and grown to an OD~ of 1Ø vWF fragment synthesis is induced by adding isopropyl-~-d-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), U.S.
Biochemicals, Cleveland, OH, to 5 mM and continuing growth for approximately 2.5 hours. The cells are harvested by centrifugation for 1 minute at 10,000 g and then ~ashed and repelleted (at 10,000 g) 3 times with phosphate buffered saline (0.14 M NaCl, 0.1 M Na2HPO4 pH 7.0). The bacterial pellet is then solubilized by boiling for 10 minutes in a buffer comprising 0.01 M NaH~PO4, 10 mM Na2EDTA, 1~ ~w/v) sodium dodecylsulfate, pH 7Ø The incubation is continued for 2 hours at 60C in the presence also of 10 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT). Suitable volumes (such as 200 ~1) of such extracts can be used directly in ELIFA apparatus or dot immunoblot analyses. Prior to adding l25I-GPIb~ to the plate several rinses of Hepes-buffered saline are washed through the wells. This extract preparation technique is applicable to the screening requirements posed by Examples 25-30.
vWF derived polypeptides from colonies representing the most intense response are selected for confirmation of enhanced binding using methods such as subjecting purified or partially purified extra~ts therefrom as appropriate to (A) immunoblotting according to the procedure of Example 2 with con~ormation-dependent NMC-4 antibody; (B) assaying for ability to inhibit botrocetin-induced vWF binding to formalin-fixed platelets on a dose dependent basis (Example 3); or (C) assayed for ability to inhibit the binding of anti GPIb~ monoclonal antibodies to platelets (Example 6). The procedure of Example 6 can be readily adapted as a supplementary screening system for other target receptors besides GPIb~ (see Examples 25-30).
Clones which confer enhanced positive responses in these systems are then subjected to standard DNA sequencing procedures to identify the vWF gene mutations responsible for ; WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7~
'Z~7~0'~ 120 -the mutant properties. The appropriate mutations may be copied, according to the procedure of Example 22, into a vWF
DNA sequence within a plasmid (such as a pAD5/WT-pCDM8n~
expression plasmid) suitable for expression in cHO-~l cells.
Further cnaracterization, such as enhanced potential for induction of platelet aggregation by ll6 kg/mol homodimers thereof can then be performed.

Example 17 - Selection of oligonucleo1tides for expression in E.coli of Eragments of mature von Willebrand factor subunit reflectinq Type IIB disease mutations This example demonstrates the mutagenesis strategy for expression in E.coli of the vWF subunit sequence encoded by p5E or p7E plasmid, said constructs containing also Trp5~ or Cys550 mutations.
p7E and p5E expression plasmids (Examples l and 4) were recovered from cultures of E.coli strain BL21 (DE3) according to the alkaline lysis procedure of Birnboim, H.C. and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids Research, 7, 1513 (1979).
The p5E and p7E constructs contain, in reference to the vWF BamHI insert, an upstream XbaI site and a downstream HindIII site. The BamHI site at which the vWF sequence is inserted is positioned directly between an upstream initiating methionine codon of the parent plasmid and a downstream stop codon thereof. Rosenberg, A.H. et al., Gene, 56, 125 (1987). As a result of the structure of pET-3A and the position of the BamHI~ site therein, expressed p5E or p7E
vWF polypeptides contain also a 17 residue amino terminal se~uence extension derived from the gene lO capsid protein of the vector.
Accordingly the XbaI/HindIII fragment was removed from p5E or p7E and inserted into Ml3mpl8 which had been previously restricted with XbaI and HindIII.
Site directed mutagenesis was then performed in Ml3mpl8, according to the procedure of Examples l and 4 using the following oligonucleotides (for p7E) to insert either a Trp5 or Cys550 mutation.

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 For Trp5~: Oligonucleotide (16) - see SEQ ID N0: 18 3i G ATGCCG TCG ACC GATGACCT 5' Tyrso8 TrPsl ~

and for Cys550: Oligonucleotide (17) - see SEQ ID NO: l9 3' GG-GTCTTCACGCAGGCGCACC 5' Gln548 Cys550 Oligonucleotides are equivalent to non-coding strand (transcribed strand) DNA with the secreted single stranded (+) form of M13mpl8 DNA containing coding strand vWF DNA.
Similar manipulations were performed to insert either the Trp5~ (using oligonucleotide 18) or Cys550 (again using oligonucleotide 17) mutation into a p5E construct. With respect to the Trp5~ p5E insertion, the hybridizing oligo-nucleotide reflected a Cys509 codon instead of the previously inserted glycine509 mutation as shown below.

Oligonucleotide (18) - see SEQ ID N0: 20 3' G-ATG ACGTCGACCGATGACTT 5' Tyr508Cys5O9 TrP511 Exam~,le 18 Effect of recombinant von Willebrand factor p5E fragments reflecting Type IIB mutations on the binding of anti-glycoprotein Ib monoclonal antibod~ LJ-Ibl tQ platelets Following the procedure of Example 17, the von Willebrand factor DNA sequence as contained within p5E
(Example 4) was mutagenized to contain either a tryptophan codon or a cysteine codon corresponding ~o residue positions 511 and 550 respectively.
The mutant polypeptides were expressed in E.coli strain BL21(DE3), and then solubilized from inclusion bodies, according to the procedure of Example 4.
Final purification of the monomeric p5E, p5E-Trp5~ and p5E-Cys550 polypeptides was accomplished as in Example 4 by dialysis against 6 M guanidine and urea buffers followed by anion exchange chromatography.
The ability of p5E-Trp5~, p5E-Cys550, and p5E polypeptides to compete with LJ-Ibl for binding to platelets was WO92/17192 PCT/~'S92/02~7~
21~7~ 122 demonstrated over a polypeptide concentration of between about 0.03 and about 2.5 ~M. LJ-Ibl was prepared as described in Handa, M. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 261(27), 12579-12585 (1986), iodinated according to the procsdure of Example 6 above, purified on protein-A Sepharose~ (Sigma, St.
Louis, M0) according to the method of Ey, P.L. et al., Immunochemistry, 15, 429-436 (1978) and then used in the competition assays at a concentration of 20 ~g/ml. Washed platelets (used at 1 x 108/ml) were also prepared according to the procedure of Example 6.
The assay is based on the ability under certain circumstances of native vWF to inhibit the binding to platelets of the anti-glycoprotein Ib monoclonal antibody LJ-Ibl. The antibody is also a potent inhibitor of vWF binding to platelets, indicating that the epitope of LJ-Ibl must overlap with the vWF binding site in GPIb~.
Incubations were performed by mixing the purified fragments at specified concentrations ~Figure 3) with washed platelets and l25I-LJ-Ibl for 30 minutes at 22-25C. After the incubation separation of platelet-bound from free antibody was achieved by centrifugation through a layer of 20% sucrose in Hepes-buffered saline at 12,000 g for 4 minutes. See Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., J. Clin. Invest., 72, 1-12 (1983). Residual antibody binding (Figure 3) is expressed as a percentage of binding determined from control incubation mixtures containing LJ-Ibl (20 ~g/ml) in 20 mM Hepes, 150 mM
NaCl, pH 7.4 without vWF fragments. The figure demonstrates that both the Trp5~ and the Cys550 Type IIB mutations increase the affinity of the purified polypeptide for GPIb~.

Example 19 - Ef~ect of the recombinant ~5~ vWF
fragment containing a Cys55 mutation on LJ-Ibl binding to platelets at different monoclonal antibodv concentrations This example further demonstrates, at two different monoclonal antibody concentrations, the effect of the Trp550 to Cys550 mutation on the binding of the residue 441-733 vWF
subunit fragment to platelet GPIb~.

W092/1719~ PCT/~92tO2~7~
, 123 ~ ~7~a~
Following the procedure of Example 18, vWF polypeptide (p5E or p5E-Cys550) was incubated at various concentrations ~Figure 4) with washed platelets (1 x 108/ml) for 30 minutes at 22-250c but in the presenc~ of either 6 or 20 ~g/ml of LJ-Ibl. The assay otherwise followed the procedure of Example 18. As demonstrated in Figure 4, the Cys550 polypeptide competes for platelet GPIb~ receptor at both antibody concentrations with a higher affinity than the wild ~ype p5E
polypeptide. The affinity of the p5E-Cys550 molecule for platelet receptor is at least 5-fold greater than that of the "wild type" p5E molecule. An additional procedure to test, the behavior of vWF polypeptides containing Type IIB
mutations is dependent on direct binding of ~I-labelled polypeptides to platelets. It is noted also that most of the p5E-Cys550 molecules in the samples whose activity was demonstrated in Figures 3 and 4 are dimers.
The results of Examples 18 and 19 are consistent with the hypothesis that amino acid substitutions in the cysteine 509-695 loop region of the mature vWF subunit are,responsible for the molecular basis of Type IIB von Willebrand disease.

Example 20 - An improved procedure to solubilize recombinant bacterially-expressed and disulfide-stabilized residue 441-733 vWF fragments An optimized procedure for the solubilization of "p5E-type" polypeptides with formation of disulfide bonds therein has been developed which is believed to comprise an improved method to practice this aspect of the invention. Following this new procedure, a sample of "wet pellet" (Example 1) weighing approximately 350 mg was dissolved in lO ml of a buffer composed of 6 M guanidine HCl, 50 mM Tris, pH 8.8.
Dithiothreitol (DTT) was then added to a final concentration of 10 mM, and the mixture was allow~d to set at 37C for two hours. The protein concentration of the solution was determined by a bicinchoninic acid (BCA) titration kit (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, IL). A typical final result is 2 mg/ml.
Seven ml of the above solution was then diluted to 140 ml with 3 M guanidine HCl, 50 mM Tris, pH 8.8 and then W092/1719' PCT/US92/02~7-2~ 124 subjected to dialysis for approximately 24 hours against Hepes-buffered saline using several reservoir changes.
Oxidation of thiol groups occurs during dialysis as the DTT
is removed.
The desired oxidized p5E-type molec~lle can be purified by reverse phase HPLC on a lx30 cm C8 co:lumn (Vydac Co., Hesperia, CA) using an acetonitrile gradient. The remaining components of the eluting solvent are a constant amount of n-propanol (3~) and a constant amount of trifluoroacetic acid (0.1%), with the balance being spectrograde purity water.
The recommended acetonitrile gradient profile is 30% for 5 minutes, increasing linearly to ~6~ in 35 minutes, to 70 in 5 minutes, and maintained at 70% for an additional 10 minutes. The column is operated at a constant flow rate of 2.5 ml/min. The oxidized monomer of p5E itself (Example 4) corresponds to the most hydrophilic major peak, eluting at approximately 40 minutes.

Example 21 - Expression in stable mammalian transformants o~ the homodimeric 116 kg/mol von Willebrand ~actor fragment containina a Trp550 to Cys550 mutation This example is illustrative of conditions under ~hich a DNA sequence encoding the mature vWF subunit fragment having an amino terminus at residue 441 (arginine) and a carboxy terminus at residue 730 (asparagine), and containing also a Type IIB mutation may be expressed in a stable mammalian cell transformant with secretion therefrom of the polypeptide.
The mutation strategy of Example 9 was adopted, with modifications, to insert the Cys550 codon mutation into a pCDM8~ construct.
Following the procedure of Birnboim, ~.C. and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids Research, 7, 1513 (1979~, pAD4tWT plasmids were recovered from storage cultures of E.coli strain XS127. The approximate 950 base pair EcoRI-SmaI fragment of pAD4/WT
(Example 9) was subcloned into the EcoRI-SmaI site within the polylinker region of M13mpl8 phage. The vWF sequence in M13mpl8 was then mutagenized according to the site directed mutagenesis protocol of Example l. Oligonucleotide 17 (see Example 17) was used to insert the Trp550~Cys550 mutation.

W092/17192 PCT/~'S92/02~7 The oligonucleotide is equivalent to non-coding strand (transcribed strand) DNA with the secreted single stranded (+) form of M13mpl8 DNA containing coding strand vWF DNA.
The mutagenized DNA sequence was recovered as the EcoRI-SmaI fragment and subcloned into pAD5/WT (Example 7) whichhad been previously digested with EcoRI and SmaI.
Review of the cloning strategy of Example 7 discloses that the XhoI-NotI fragment of pAD3-2 (containing the expression construct ~or wild type vWF residues 441-730) contains the following sequence of elements 5'-XhoI..... EcoRI..... XbaI-SalI-vWF expression ~onstruct-XbaI-NotI-3 wherein the EcoRI site is acquired by cloning the XbaI-restricted vWF insert into pBluescript II XS(). A SmaI site is defined within the vWF coding sequence corresponding to amino acid residues 716-718. Reference to Figure 5 shows that the XhoI-NotI fragment can be appropriately inserted into pCDM8-type vectors for expression. Consequently, insertion of the mutagenized EcoRI-SmaI fragment as a replacement for the equivalent EcoRI-SmaI fragment of pAD5/WT
creates a construct from which the Type IIB-mutated 441-730 vWF sequence can be expressed.
No SmaI restriction sites are contained in the parent pCDM8 plasmid. (The complete nucleotide sequence of pCMD8 is available from Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). In addition to the SmaI site at vWF residues 716-718, an additional SmaI
site is contributed to the pAD5/WT construct as part of the pBluescript II XS() polylinker (upstream from the vWF "XbaI-XbaI" insert and downstream from the EcoRI site). A further SmaI site arises in the 2000 base pair neomycin resistance gene fragment cloned into the BamHI site of pCDMB to create pCDM8~.
A strategy of (1) partial digestion with SmaI, and (2) agarose gel purification of the appropriately restricted vehicle fragment was used to assure reassembly of the proper expression vector. Five ~g of pAD5/WT plasmid were incubated with 5 units of EcoRI for 60 minutes at 37C resulting in complete digestion of the site and a homogenous population of linear fragments. A partial digest with SmaI was then accomplished using 5 ~g of linearized plasmid as substrate WOg~/17192 PCT/~'S92/0247 for o.~ uQl7t~o~ SmaI (at 370C for 15 minutes). Plasmid fragments were purified on an agarose sizing gel and a population of linearized plasmid of approximately 7.3 kb having been cleaved at the vWF residue 716-718 site was selected for insertion of the mutagenized EcoRI-SmaI
fragment.
The Arg5~ to Trp5~ mutation may be similarly expressed in a 116 kg/mol homodimer using oligonucleotide (18) in the mutagenesis protocol. Alternatively, using two or more complete cycles of mutagenesis in Ml3mpl8, the Trp5~, Cys550 and further Type IIB mutations may be expressed in a single polypeptide.
Experimental procedures for effecting stable transformation of Chinese hamster ovary cells and for immunopurification of secreted 116 kg/mol vWF polypeptide were described in Example 7. For the purpose of purifying vWF polypeptides containing IIB mutations according to the present example, however, an immunoaffinity column procedure was used.
Twenty mg of purified NMC-4 antibody were coupled to CNBr-activated Sepharose~ 4B beads tPharmacia, ~ppsala, Sweden). The column was preequilibrated with 0.5 M LiCl, 50 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4, containing 0.05% (w/v) NaN3.
Culture plates containing confluent CH0-Kl cells were covered with DMEM/10% FCS and incubated for 24 hours. The medium was then collected. In a typical experiment, 500 ml of resultant culture medium containing secreted polypeptides were then applied to the immunoaffinity column. The column was then extensively washed with 15 bed volumes of equilibration buffer. vWF antigens were then eluted using a solution of equilibration buffer containing also 3 M NaSCN.
The eluted vWF polypeptides were concentrated by ultracentrifugation and then dialyzed against Hepes-saline buffer (150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.4). Protein concentrations were determined using the bicinchoninic acid titration method (Pierce Che~ical Co., Rockford, IL).
An alternate strategy for the transfer of Type IIB
mutation codons to pAD5/WT expression constructs is to transform pAD3-2 into E.coll CJ236 and select for bacterial ,; .

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/0247 colonies resistant to ampicillin (conferred by plasmid) and chloramphenicol (conferred by host CJ236). An individual colony is grown in 2X-YT culture medium to late log phase and diluted l:lOo in fresh medium in the presence of VCS-Ml3 (helper filamentous phage available from Strategene, La Jolla, CA~ see Maniatis, T. et al., eds. Molecular Cloninq, 2nd ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1989. After another overnight incubation, single-stranded uracil-containing DNA is isolated from secreted filamentous phage and the DNA is subjected to the standard extension reaction associated with mutagenesis using mutant oligonucleotides that are identical to the coding strand of vWF except for the intended mutation(s). After the extension reaction, the DNA
is transformed into E.coli XL-l Blue cells, tStratagene, La Jolla, CA), selected with ampicillin and tetracycline and the resultant colonies characterized for the presence of mutant plasmids. The vWF inserts within the mutant plasmids are sequenced completely to confirm the absence of any aclditional mutagenic errors. The vWF insert is cloned into pcDMsn~ as 20 .an XhoI/NotI fragment as described above for the yeneration of pAD5/~T.
An additional strategy is to transform pAD51WT into CJ236 and to select on plates containing chloramphenicol and kanamycin (Xanr is conferred by the neomycin gene). A single resistant colony is picked and grown as described above for preparation of single-stranded DNA. An extension reaction using a coding strand oligonucleotide followed by transformation into XS-127 results in colonies with mutations, the frequencies ranging from 20-100%, depending upon the oligo and purity of the single-stranded DNA used in the mutagenesis reaction. Mutant colonies are sequenced to verify the targeted mutation, and the lack of any unexpected mutation. The mutant plasmids are ready for transformation into CH0-Kl cells for the es_ablishment of stable cell lines.

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7~
~7~ ~ 128 Example 22 - Construction of a stable mammalian transformant for the expression of the monomeric 441-730 mature von Willebrand factor subunit fragment with cysteine-to-glycine mutations at residues 459, 462 and 464 and containing also one or more mutations reflective of Type IIB disease Following the procedure of Examples 9 and 21, an EcoRI-SmaI fragment may be removed from pAD4/WT plasmid and subjected to two or more successive rGunds of site directed mutagenesis in Ml3mpl8 to (A) replace one or more of cysteine residues 459, 462 and 464 with, for example, glycine or alanine codons and (B) substitute one or more mutant codons identified from Type IIB patients or one or more codons which confer on the resulting polypeptide properties reflective of Type IIB von Willebrand disease.
Oligonucleotide 13 can be used to substitute glycine codons for each of the above specified cysteine codons thereby preventing formation of the 116 kg/mol homodimer and leading to khe expression of 52/48 Xg/mol monomers with wild type tertiary structure. ~ second round of mutagenesis using, for example, oligonucleotide 17 or 18 is used to insert Type IIB point mutations, in this case Cys550 or Trp511.
Similarly, monomeric residue 441-730 fragments refl~cting Type IIB codon mutations and only one or two of glycine substitutions at positions 459, 462 and 464 may be made following the above procedure and using the oligonucleotides of Example ll.
Alternate or additional strategies for the trans:Eer of Type IIB mutant codons to pAD5 constructs according to this Example, and from which can be generated 52/48 kg/mol monomeric fragments, are provided in Example 21 above.

Example 23 - Effect of reduced and alkylated recombinant von Willebrand factor fragment reflecting the Cys550 Type IIB mutation on the binding of anti-glycoprotein Ib monoclonal antibody LJ-Ibl to platelets This example demonstrates that residue position 550 in the mature vWF subunit has no direct effect on binding to GPIb~ but is important in the context of modulating the , :' WO9~/17192 ~1 0 7 ~ ~ ~ PCT/~!Sg2/02~7 structure of the vWF subunit and hence activlty of the GPIb~
binding region (residues 474-48~ and 694-708).
p5E polypeptide was expressed and purified accoxding to an improved procedure which modifies the method of Example 1.
The corresponding p5E-Cys550 polypeptide was similarly expressed and purified. The inclusion body solubilization method of Example 1 was followed up to the solubilization step which utilized 6 M guanidine HCl, 50 mM Tris, pH 8.8, said solution now containing 10 mM dithiothreitol.
Incubation in this solution, according to the new procedure, continued for 60 minutes at 37C. p5E and p5E-Cys55 polypeptides were then S-carboxymethylated with iodoacetamide according to the procedure of Fujimura, Y. et al., J. Biol.
Chem., 262, 1734-1739 (1987). The extract was then subjected to high performance liquid chromatography first using Q-Sepharose~ Fast Flow (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) for anion exchange followed by cation exchange on a Protein-Pack SP 8HR
column ~Waters Co., Bedford, MA).
The resultant polypeptides contain glycine residues at positions 459, 462, 464, 471 and 474 and chemically inactivated cysteines at positions 509 and 695, and in the case of p5E-Cys550, an additional chemically inactivated cysteine at position 550. Consistant with the lack of glycosylation arising in the bacterial expression system, the polypeptides have apparent molecular weights of approximately 36 kg/mol.
Binding inhibition assays were performed generally according to the procedure of Example 18 with 10 ~g/ml of ~ LJ-Ibl being used to evaluate the inhibitory effect of vWF polypeptides on antibody binding. Ten ~g/ml is approximately the concentration of LJ-Ibl at which, in these assays, half-maximal binding of antibody to platelets is acheived. Various concentrations of vWF-derived polypeptide (Figure 6) were used with the constant amount of LJ-Ibl.
Non-specific binding was determined in the presence of a 100 fold excess of unlabelled LJ-Ibl and has been subtracted from all data points. Binding of the antibody was again expressed as a percentage of that ~easured for the control mixture lacking recombinant polypeptide.

WO92/1719~ PCT/U~92/0247~
2 ~O'~a 130 ~
Figure 6 demonstrates comparative antibody binding inhibition results for the reduced and alkylated p5E molecule (r36/Trp550) and for the mutant reduced and alkylated p5E
molecule carrying also a reduced and alkylated cysteine at position 550 (r36/Cys550).
It can be seen (Figure 6) that, in the reduced and alkylated fragments (which have no stablle tertiary structure), substitution of Trp550 by cysteine does not effect binding to GPIb, presumably because the GPIb~ binding sequences are already exposed. ~t is an~icipated that numerous other amino acid species could also occupy position 550 without effect under these assay conditions. It is likely that only when the polypeptide is assembled into a three dimensional structure having conformational domains mimicking those of the native subunit that the effects of mutations altering the activity of the loop region are evident. The result o~ this Example is in contrast to that of Example 18 (Figure 3) where the Cys550 mutation substantially enhanced the binding of bacterially-expressed polypeptide to platelets to the exclusion of LJ-Ibl in the context of a p5E construct which polypeptide possessed the 509-695 loop.
It has also been discovered that addition of botrocetin at a concentration of approximately 0.4 ~g/ml up to about lO
~g/ml or higher, to a suitable concentration of bacterially-expressed residue 441-733 vWF fragment (such as approximately 0.5 ~ Molar) substantially enhances the ability of the vWF
~ragment to inhibit the binding of an anti-GPIb~ monoclonal antibody to GPIb~, as measured by the concentration of the vWF fragment necessary to achieve half-maximal inhib.ition.
Specific variants of the vWF fragment for which the effect can be demonstrated includes the p5E molecule containing an intrachain disulfide bond, reduced and alkylated p5E
polypeptide, the p7E polypeptide, and the fragment comprising residues 445-733 when reduced and alkylated. As was previously noted, the expressed residue 441-733 fragments of the invention contain attached to the amino terminal residue (441~ a 17 residue amino acid sequence derived fram the gene lO capsid protein of the pET-3A vector. It is very likely .

, WO92/17192 PCT/~l~9~/0247 that complexes of the residue 441-730 mature vWF subunit fragment or subfragments thereof (and whether or not glycosylated), formed with other appropriate molecules will enhance the affinity (and resultant antithrombotic utility) - 5 of the vWF fragment or subfragment for GPIb~, or for other known or potential receptors or ligands. In addition, the therapeutic effects of such complexes may be appropriately mimicked or duplicated by effecting within the residue 441-730 fragment appropriate amino acid sequence mutations.

Example 24 - Inhibition of antibody binding to platelets by mutant and non-mutant homodimeric 116 kg/mol fraqments expressed from CH0-Kl cells For this example, measurement of binding inhibition was performed according to the procedure of Example 23 except that ristocetin (Sigma, St. Louis, M0) was added to a final concentration of 1 mg/ml at a point in time 30 minutes prior to centrifugation. Wild type recombinant 116 kg/mol homodimer (Trp550) was prepared as described in Example 7.
The DNA corresponding to mutant 116 kg/mol homodimer ~Cys5~) was prepared according to the procedure of Example 21 with expression thereof followin~ the procedure of Example 7, as modified in Example 21.
The inhibitory effects of mammalian-expressed vWF
fragments on anti-GPIb~ antibody binding to platelets were found to be different in certain respects than those of the fragments expressed ~rom bacteria. The wild type recombinant 116 kg/mol homodimers performed similarly to native multimeric vWF in that they effectively inhibit antibody binding in the presence of ristocetin (and also botrocetin) but are ineffective in its absence (Figure 7). However, in contrast to the results seen with the native sequence 116 kg/mol homodimer (referred to as rll6/Trp550 in Figure 7), the rll6/Cys55 homodimer effectively inhibits LJ-Ibl binding without ristocetin, although the inhibitory effect is further enhanced when ristocetin is added thus reproducing the classic functional abnormality of Type IIB von Willebrand factor. In the presence of ristocetin, the ability of the 116 kg/mol homodimer to inhibit antibody bindin~ is increased WO92~17192 PCT/US92/02~7~
2~ 39 132 approximately 10 fold as a result of the Trp550 ~ Cys550 mutation.
The combined results of Examples 23 and 24 strongly suggest that the two segments of the 52/48 kg/mol fragment believed to represent the actual GPIb~ binding site (residues 474-488 and 694-708) may be prevented from effectively interacting with the GPIb~ receptor when the vWF subunits possess a native conformation such as pre!sented by circulating vWF. Disruption of tertiary structure (as in the case of reduced and alkylated E.coli-expressed polypeptides) or modulation thereof (as in circulating vWF of Type IIB
patients, or in normal vWF molecules affected by a stimulus associated with a thrombotic or wound event) results in proper exposure of the binding sequences of vWF for GPIb~.
An additional procedure to test the behavior of horoodimeric vWF polypeptides containing Type IIB mutations (or antithrombotic monomers patterned thereon and derived by mutation of cysteine residues at one or more of positions 459, 462 and 464) is dependent on direct binding of labelled polypeptide to platelets.

III. Develo~ment of Additional Antithrombotic Polypeptides Example 25 - Screening of mutant antithrombotic polypeptide fragments pattern~d on the residue 441-730 region of mature von Willebrand factor subunit havinq enhanced affinity for collaqen Following the procedure of Method 1 of Example 16, random mutagenesis can be performed on a cDNA corresponding 30 to the residue ~41-730 vWF fragment, to target the collagen binding domain encoded therein. Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol.
Chem., 264~29), 17361-17367 (1989) have determined that the mature suhunit residue sequence 512-673 is necessary ~in the dimeric 116 kg/mol vWF fragment) to support binding to collagen. Binding to collagen was further reported therein to require intact disulfide bonds, an observation which was stated to have at least two possibl~ explanations.
As stated by Mohri, H. et al., collagen may bind elements within the residue sequence 512-673, or to the residue 597-621 subdomain thereof, when an appropriate '.`'` '`

WO92/1719~ PCT/US92/0247 disulfide-stabilized tertiary structure is present.
Alternatively, the actual binding regions in the 52/48 kg/mol fragment are outside the 512-673 region but require stabilization of a functional conformation by said internal region. Roth, G.J. et al., siochemistry~ 25, 8357-8361 (1986) have identified a Type III collagen-binding do~ain as within the residue 542-662 sequence of t:he fragment.
For the purpose of identifying vWF--derived antithrombotic polypeptides with enhanced collagen binding ability, all or part of a cDNA encoding the 441-730 frayment can be subject to random mutagenesis. The population of resultant mutagenized vWF DNA sequences is then reinserted into pET-3A plasmid, as an XbaI-HindIII insert, for transformation of host bacterial cells followed by expression therein and large scale screening for desired mutant phenotypes. Mutations giving enhanced binding may then be inserted into mammalian or other eucaryotic host cell constructs for further testing.
A large scale screening assay suitable for detecting enhanced affinity of the mutant polypeptides for collagen can be patterned upon the screening assay for GPIb~ binding in Example 16, with appropriate modifications.
Specifically, the mutagenized population of M13mpl8 constructs is cloned into pET-3~ plasmid followed by transformation of E.coli BL21(DE3). Partial purification of bacterial inclusion body lysates follows the procedure of Example 16. Contacting of the resultant vWF fragments with ristocetin or botrocetin is omitted. ~ monomeric type III
collagen is applied to the nitrocellulose i~stead of ~
GPIb~ as in Example 16. Monomeric type III collagen is prepared according to the procedure of Roth, G.J. et al., Biochemistry, 25, 8357-8361 (1986) and iodinated following the method of Bolton, A.E. and Hunter, W.M., Biochem. J., 133, 529-539 ~1973). Application o~ 50 ~l aliquots of monomeric collagen ~0.25 ~g/ml) having a specific activity of between approximately 5 x 1o8 and approximately 5 x 101 cpm/mg should result in an adequate bound signal in relation to nonspecific binding. Other suitable quantities and specific activities can be determined and substituted as WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/02~7 ~ 134 necessary. The alternate assay of Example 16 based upon incubation with SDS and then DTT to prepare lysa~es is equally applicable.
Additional screening strategies useful to confirm the properties of a much smaller number of bacterial clones which gave positive responses in the above assay (and using labelled vWF fragments and unlabelled collagen) are provided by the binding assays of Pareti, F.I. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 262 (28), 13835-13841 (1987) and Mohri, H. et al., J._Biol.
Chem., 264 (29), 17361-17367 (1989) . The I~I labelling procedures described herein allow for specific activities varying over many orders of magnitude so that a wide range of receptor (ligand) and vWF fragment concentrations can be interacted.

Example 26 - Screening of mutant antithrombotic polypeptide fragments patterned on the residue 441-730 region of mature von Willehrand factor subunit having enhanced affinity for qlycosaminoglycans or Proteoql,vcans 20- The binding of heparin to vWF has been determined to involve one or more amino acid subsequences within the residue 512-673 domain. It is likely that this binding activity is conferred by limited linear subsequences within the above stated region since it has been demonstrated that both the intact disulfide-stabilized 116 kg/mol homodimer and the reduced and alkylated 52/48 kg/mol monomer are equally effective in inhibiting vWF-heparin interaction. Mohri, H.
et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(29), 17361-17367 (1989).
The mutagenesis strategy of Example 16, method 1 is used 3a to create a randomized population of DNA sequences in bacterial clones, with the screening of suitable colonies ~ollowing the procedure of Example 25 except that radiolabelled heparin is substituted for collagen as binding ligand. Labelling is accomplished by subjecting heparin sodium salt (porcine intestinal mucosa, grade II, Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) or similar material to derivatization with fluoresceinamine followed by iodination of the conjugate.
The l25I labelling procedure allows for specific activities of heparin varying over many orders of magnitude so that a wide WO9~/17197 PCT/~'S92/02~7 range of receptor (ligand) and vWF fragment concentrates can be interacted. Smith, J.W. and Knauer, D.J. Anal. Biochem~, 160, 105-114 (1987).
As noted previously, it is possible that the collagen, and more importantly, the heparin binding domains of antithrombotic polypeptides patterned upon 52/48 kg/mol vWF
fragment will prevent the anti-GPIb~ activity of the - molecule, such as by causing the polypeptide to be bound at nonspecific "heparin binding sites" throughout the vascular system. The random mutagenesis procedure oE this Example could also be used to screen for a mutant binding subsequence having less affinity for glycosaminoglycans (or proteoglycans) or collagen than present in the wild type sequence, thereby providing an additional alternate method of inactivating said binding activities.
Additional screening strategies useful to confirm the desired properties expressed in a much smaller number of clones giving positive responses in the first assay (and using labelled vWF fragments and unlabelled hepar:in) are provided by Mohri, H. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 264(29), 17361-17367 (1989) and Fugimura, Y. et al., J. Biol. Chem., 262(4), 1734-1739 (1987).

Example 27 - Screening of mutant antithrombotic polypeptide fragments patterned on the A3 domain of mature von Willebrand factor subunit having enhanced affinity for collaqen Following the procedure of Example 1, a double stranded cDNA encoding the entire vWF protein (for the pre-propeptide) is amplified in a polymerase chain reaction using synthetic oligonucleotides selected to flank the A3 domain encoding region, said oligonucleotides carrying also 5' or 3' restriction sequences suitable for creating a vWF insert in the multiple cloning site of M13mpl8. The strategy of Examples 16 and 25 is again applied to generate, by random mutagenesis of subregions of the encoding cDNA, mutant vWF
polypeptides with potential enhanced binding activity toward collagen. The collagen binding region of the A3 domain is stated to comprise residues 948-998 thereof (Roth, G.J. et 2 1 0 ~1 0 ~ 136 PCT~'S92/02~7 al., Biochemistry, 25, 8357-8361 (1986)) although it is anticipated that other subdomains of the domain may participate in binding.

Example 28 - screening of mutant antilhrombotic polypeptide fragments patterned on mature von Willebrand factor subunit having enhanced affinity for the Platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor site The screening assay of Example 16 for mutant vWF-derived polypeptides having enhanced platelet GPIb~ binding activity is modified as described below to identify mutant vWF
polypeptides having enhanced platelet GPIIb/IIIa receptor binding affinity.
The region of vWF cDNA selected for PCR amplification is recommended to encompass a region corresponding to approximately 100 amino acid residues on either side of the Arg Gly Asp Ser sequence (subunit residues 1744-1747).
Qligonucleotides for amplification are again designed to contain 5' and 3' terminal restriction sequences so that the cDNA may be inserted into M13mpl8 phage for random mutagenesis.
Preparation of oligonucleotides for random mutagenesis of the target domain (focusing on the residues directly proximal to and including Arg Gly Asp Ser) follows Method 1 of Example 16. With respect to the binding assay, neither botrocetin or ristocetin is applied to the nitrocellulose.
~ GPIIb/IIIa purified by the method of Fitzgerald, L.A. et al., Anal. Biochem., 151, 169-177 (}985) or Newman, P.J. and Kahn, R.A., Anal. Biochem., 132, 215-218 (1983) and labelled by the method of Bolton, A.E. and Hunter, W.M., Biochem. J., 133,529-539 (1973) is substituted for t~I GPIb~. Applied to the 96-well plates are 50 ~l aliquots of HEPES/BSA containing G~IIb/IIIa at a suitable concentration thereof, such as approximately 0.25 ~g/ml or higher, with a specific activity of between approximately 5 x 1o8 and approximately 5 x 101 cpm/mg. The I~I labelling procedure allows for specific activities varying over many orders of magnitude so that a wide range of receptor (ligand) and vWF fragment concentrations can be interacted.

WO92/1719~ PCT/~'S92/~2~7 An additional screening strateg~ ~e~ o confirm the properties of a much smaller number of bacterial clones giving positive responses in the first assay (and using labelled vWF fragments and unlabelled GPIIb/IIIa is provided by Ruggeri, Z.M. et al., J. Clin. Invest., 72, ~-12 (1983).

Example 29 - Screening of mutant antithrombotic polypeptide fragments patterned on the residue 1-272 region of mature von Willebrand factor subunit having enhanced affinity for qlycosaminoqlycans and_proteoqlycans The strategy of Example 26 is applied using a suitable amplified cDNA to generate mutant polypeptides derived from the residue 1-272 domain of mature vWF subunit with potential enhanced binding activity toward glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans.

Example 30 - Screening of mutant antithrombotic polypeptide fragments patterned on the residue 1-272 region of mature von Willebrand factor subunit having 20. enhanced affinitY for factor VIII
The general strategy of Examples 16 and 25 is applied to ge~erate and detect mutant polypeptides patterned on vWF with enhanced binding activity toward factor VIII. Coagulation factor VIII, purified by the me~hod of Fulcher, C.A. and Zimmerman, T.S., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 79, 1648-1652 (1982) and labelled with I~I to specific activities comparable to that of the` other ligands in Examples 25-29 is used. The I~I labelling procedure allows for specific activities varying over many orders of magnitude so that a wide range of receptor (ligand) and vWF fragment concentrates can be interacted.

Deposit of Strains Useful in Practicin~ the Invention Deposits of biologically pure cultures of the following strains were made under the Budapest Treaty with the American Type Culture Collection, 12301 Parklawn Drive, Rockville, Maryland. The accession numbers indicated were assigned WO92tl7192 PCT/US92/02~7 2~ 138 after successful viability testing, and the requisite fees were paid.
Access to said cultures will be available during pendency of the patent application to one determined by the Commissioner of the United States Patent and Trademark Office to be entitled thereto under 37 C.F.R. 1.14 and 35 U.S.C.
122, or if and when such access is required by the Budapest Treaty. All restriction on availability of said cultures to the public will be irrevocably removed upon the granting of a patent based upon the application and said cultures will remain permanently available for a term of at least five years after the most recent request for the furnishing of samples and in any case for a period of at least 30 years after the date of the deposits. Should the cultures become nonviable or be inadvertantly destroyed, they will be replaced with viable culture(s) of the same taxonomic description.

$train/Plasmid ATCC No. De~osit Date E.coli p5E BL21 (DE3) 96.3 ATCC 68406 9/19/go 20 E.coli XS127 96.4 ATCC 68407 9/19/90 WO92/17192 2 ~ PCT/U~92/0247 SEQUENCE LISTING

(1) GENERAL INFO~MATION:
(i) APPLICANT: Ruggeri, Zaverio M. ,and Ware, Jerry, invento:rs on behalf of Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation (ii) TITLE OF INVENTION: Therapeutic Fragments of von Willebrand Factor (iii~NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 20 (iv) CORRESPONDENCE ADDRESS:
(A) ADDRESSEE: Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation (B) STREET: 10666 North Torrey Pines Road (C) CITY: La Jolla (D) STATE: California (E) COUNTRY: United States (F) ZIP: 92037 (v) COMPUTER READABLE FORM:
(A) MEDIUM TYPE: 1.2 megabyte 5 1/4" floppy (B) COMPUTER: AST Bravo 386SX IBM PC comp.
(C) OPERATING SYSTEM: MS DOS version 3.2 (D~ SOFTWARE: WordPerfect 5.1 conv. to ASCII
(vi) CURRENT APPLICATION DATA:
(A) APPLICATION NUMBER: Express Mail Label (B) FILING DATE: 27-Mar-92 (C) CLASSIFICATION:
(vii)PRIOR APPLICATION DATA: This appl. is a c-i-p o~
(A) APPLICATION NUMBER: US 07/613,004 (B) FILING DATE: 13-Nov-1990 (vii)PRIOR APPLICATION DATA: This appl. is a c-i-p of (A) APPLICATION NUMBER: US 07/600,183 ~B) FILING DATE: 17-Oct-1990 (viii)ATTORNEY/AGENT INFORMATION:
(A) NAME: Barron, Alexis (B) REGISTRATION NUMBER: 22,702 (C) REFERENCE/DOCKET NUMBER: P16,633-E PCT
(ix) TELECQMMUNICATION INFORMATION: -WO92/17192 PCT/US92/0247~
~ t ~ 140 - (A) TELEPHONE: (215) 923-4466 (B) TELEFAX: (215) 923-2189 ~2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 1:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
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Glu Asp Cys Pro Val Cys Glu Val Ala Gly Arg Arg Phe Ala Ser Gly Lys Lys Val Thr Leu Asn Pro Ser Asp Pro Glu His Cys Gln 20Ile Cys His Cys Asp Val Val Asn Leu Thr Cys Glu Ala Cys Gln Glu Pro Gly Gly Leu Val Val Pro Pro Thr Asp Ala Pro Val Ser Pro Thr Thr Leu Tyr Val Glu Asp Ile 5er Glu Pro Pro Leu His Asp Phe Tyr Cys Ser 35Arg Leu Leu Asp Leu Val Phe Leu Leu Asp Gly Ser Ser Arg Leu Ser Glu Ala Glu Phe WO92/17192PCT/US92/02~7 1~1 Glu Val Leu Lys Ala Phe Val Val Asp Met 5Met Glu Arg Leu Arg Ile Ser Gln Lys Trp Val Arg Val Ala Val Val Glu Tyr His Asp Gly Ser His Ala Tyr Ile Gly Leu Lys Asp Arg Lys Arg Pro Ser Glu Leu Arg Arg Ile 15 575 5~0 Ala Ser Gln Val Lys Tyr Ala Gly Ser Gln 20Val Ala Ser Thr Ser Glu Val Leu Lys Tyr Thr Leu Phe Gln Ile Phe Ser Lys Ile Asp Arg Pro Glu Ala Ser Arg Xle Ala Leu Leu Leu Met Ala Ser Gln Glu Pro Gln Arg Met : 30 ~25 630 Ser Arg Asn Phe Val Arg Tyr Yal Gln Gly 35Leu Lys Lys Lys Lys Val Ile Val Ile Pro Val Gly Ile Gly Pro His Ala Asn Leu Lys Gln Ile Arg Leu Ile Glu Lys Gln Ala Pro :~ 665 670 WO 92/1~1~2 PCr/US92/0247~
~1~7~ 142 Glu Asn Lys Ala Phe Val Leu Ser Ser Val 5Asp Glu Leu Glu Gln ~ln Arg Asp Glu Ile GTT AGC TAC CTC TGT GAC CTT GCC CCT GAA 8 l 0 Yal Ser Tyr Leu Cys Asp Leu Ala Pro Glu lOGCC CCT CCT CCT ACT CTG CCC CCC CAC ATG 840 Ala Pro Pro Pro Thr Leu Pro Pro His Met Ala Gln Val Thr Val Gly Pro Gly Leu Leu Gly Val Ser Thr Leu Gly Pro Lys Arg Asn 20Ser Met Val Leu Asp Val Ala Phe Val Leu :;lu Gly Ser Asp Lys Ile Gly Glu Ala Asp 25 ~2) INFORI~IOI~ FOR SEQ ID NO: 2:
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Arg Gly Asp Ser (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 3:
t i ) S ~:QUENCE CHARZ~CTERI STI CS: A
(A) LENGTH: 26 (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear . ~ . . . .
:

WO92/17192 ~ Q ~ PCT/~S92/0247 (xi~ SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 3:

(2) INFO~MATION FOR SEQ ID NO: ~o (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
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CGG CTC CTG GCC GGC TTC A~C GGT GAG GTT 30 ~2) IN~ORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 7:
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(A) LENGTH: l9 base pairs (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Lin~ar (Xi) SEQVENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 7:
G CCT GCT GCC GTA GAA ATC l9 W~92/1719' PCT/US92/0247~
2 la7 ~ 144 ..
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~A) LENGTH: 21 base pairs (~) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: ~inear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 8: -GGC AAG GTC ACC GAG GTA GCT 2l ~2) INFOR~ATION FOR 8EQ ID NO: 9:
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(A) LENGTH: 27 (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS~ single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 9:

(21 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: l0:
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WO92/171~2 Pcr/uss2/

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(A) LENGTH: 39 (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 13:
GGG ACC CTT TGT GCA GAA GGA ~ 2l (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO~
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(A) LENGTH: 39 (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 14:
GGG CCC AAG AGG AAC TGA l8 ~2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 15:
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GAATTC GTT GAC CCT GA~ 18 2 ) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 18:
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(A) LENGTH: 2l (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid (C) STRANDEDNESS: Single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 18:
TC CAG TAG CCA GCT GCC GTA G 2l (2) ~NFO~MATION FOR SEQ ID NO: l9:
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(A) LENGTH: 2l (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid ~C) STRANDEDNESS: Single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: l9:
C CAC GCG GAC GCA CTT CTG GG 2 l (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO: 20:
(i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:
(A) LENGTH: 21 3S (B) TYPE: Nucleic acid WO92/17192 147 .~

(C) STRANDEDNESS: Single stranded (D) TOPOLOGY: Linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO: 20:
TT CAG TAG CCA GCT GCA GTA G 2l ~2) INFORM~TION FO~ SEQ ID NO: 21:
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(A) LENGTH: 320 (B) TYPE: Amino acid (C) STRANDEDNESS:
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Glu Asp Cys Pro Val Cys Glu Val Ala Gly Arg Arg Phe Ala Ser Gly Lys Lys Val Thr Leu Asn Pro Ser Asp Pro Glu His Cys Gln ~55 460 Ile Cys His Cys Asp Val Val Asn Leu Thr 20Cys Glu Ala Cys Gln Glu Pro Gly Gly Leu 475 4~0 Val Val Pro Pro Thr Asp Ala Pro Val Ser Pro Thr Thr Leu Tyr Val Glu Asp Ile Ser Glu Pro Pro Leu His Asp Phe Tyr Cys Ser Arg Leu Leu Asp Leu Val Phe Leu Leu Asp 30Gly Ser Ser Arg Leu Ser Glu Ala Glu Phe Glu Val Leu Lys Ala Phe Val Val Asp Met Met Glu Arg Leu Arg Ile Ser Gln Lys Trp Val Arg Val Ala Val Val Glu Tyr His Asp WO92/17192PCT/~'S92/0247~
2~7~ 148 Gly Ser His Ala Tyr Ile Gly Leu Lys Asp Arg Lys Arg Pro Ser Glu Leu Arg Arg Ile 5Ala Ser Gln Val Lys Tyr Ala Gly Ser Gln Val Ala Ser Thr Ser Glu Yal Leu Lys Tyr Thr Leu Phe Gln Ile Phe Ser Lys Ile Asp Arg Pro Glu Ala Ser Arg Ile Ala Leu Leu 615 6~0 Leu Met Ala Ser Gln Glu Pro Gln Arg Met 15Ser Arg Asn Phe Val Arg Tyr Val Gln Gly Leu Lys Lys Lys Lys Val Ile Val Ile Pro Val Gly Ile Gly Pro His Ala Asn Leu Lys Gln Ile Arg Leu Ile Glu Lys Gln Ala Pro Glu Asn Lys Ala Phe Val Leu Ser Ser Val 25Asp Glu Leu Glu Gln Gln Arg Asp Glu Ile Val Ser Tyr Leu Cys Asp Leu Ala Pro Glu `695 700 Ala Pro Pro Pro Thr Leu Pro Pro His Met Ala Gln Val Thr Val Gly Pro Gly Leu Leu . Gly Val Ser Thr Leu Gly Pro Lys Arg Asn 35Ser Met Val Leu Asp Val Ala Phe Val 1eu Glu Gly Ser Asp Lys Ile Gly Glu Ala Asp

Claims (41)

We claim:
1. A polypeptide patterned on a fragment of wild type mature von Willebrand factor (vWF) subunit having one or more binding sites of predetermined affinity for one or more of the ligands selected from the group consisting of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha., platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, or coagulation factor VIII, said polypeptide having a modified amino acid sequence relative to that of said fragment and an increased binding affinity, relative to said predetermined affinity, for one or more of said ligands.
2. A polypeptide prepared by mutagenesis of a DNA sequence and patterned on wild type mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, having one or more binding sites of predetermined affinity for one or more of the ligands selected from the group consisting of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha., platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, or coagulation factor VIII, said polypeptide having a modified amino acid sequence relative to that of said subunit, or of the fragment thereof, and an increased binding affinity, relative to said predetermined affinity, for one or more of said ligands.
3. A polypeptide according to Claim 1 patterned on a residue 441 (arginine) to residue 733 (valine) fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit and which has an increased binding affinity for one or more of platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib.alpha., collagen, glycosaminoglycans, or proteoglycans.
4. A polypeptide according to Claim 1 which has an increased binding affinity for platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib.alpha..
5. A polypeptide according to Claim 3 which has an increased binding affinity for platelet membrane glycoprotein Iba and a decreased binding affinity for one or more of collagen, glycosaminoglycans or proteoglycans.
6. A process for producing from DNA encoding mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, a biologically active polypeptide which process comprises the steps of:
(A) providing a DNA sequence encoding a mature vWF
subunit, or fragment thereof, in which one or more wild type codons thereof are replaced by codons specifying one or more amino acid mutations which confer upon the resultant expressed polypeptide enhanced binding affinity for GPIba relative to that of the comparable wild type sequence;
(B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable plasmid or vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said subunit fragment or subfragment;
(C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions that cause expression within the host cell of the resultant polypeptide.
7. A process according to Claim 6 for producing from DNA
encoding mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, a biologically active polypeptide which process comprises the steps of:
(A) providing a DNA sequence encoding a mature vWF
subunit, or a fragment thereof, in which one or more wild type codons are replaced by codons specifying one or more amino acid mutations found in the vWF DNA sequence of one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients;

(B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said biologically active polypeptide;
(C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions which cause expression within said host cell of the polypeptide.
8. A process according to Claim 7 for producing from DNA
encoding that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit comprising the amino acid sequence from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof, a biologically active monomer of said subunit fragment, or of a subfragment thereof, which process comprises the steps of:
(A) providing a DNA sequence encoding the subunit fragment or subfragment in which one or more of cysteine codons 459, 462 and 464 are deleted or replaced with missense codons, and one or more additional codons are replaced by corresponding codons found at equivalent sequence positions in the vWF DNA sequence of one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients and which encode therein one or more amino acid mutations;
(B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said monomeric subunit fragment or subfragment;
(C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions which cause expression within said host cell of the monomeric subunit fragment or subfragment.
9. A process according to Claim 7 for producing from DNA
encoding that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit comprising the amino acid sequence from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof, a biologically active dimer of said subunit fragment, or of a subfragment thereof, which process comprises the steps of:
(A) providing a DNA sequence encoding the subunit fragment or subfragment in which one or more codons are replaced by corresponding codons found at equivalent sequence positions in the vWF DNA
sequence of one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients and which encode therein one or more amino acid mutations;
(B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said monomeric subunit fragment or subfragment;
(C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions that cause expression within the host cell of a dimeric form of the monomeric fragment or subfragment.
10. A process according to Claim 7 for producing from DNA
encoding that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit comprising the amino acid sequence from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 733 (valine), or a subfragment thereof, a biologically active monomer of said subunit fragment, or of a subfragment thereof, which process comprises the steps or:
(A) providing a DNA sequence encoding the subunit fragment or subfragment in which cysteine codons 459, 462, 464, 471 and 471 are deleted or replaced with missense codons, and one or more additional codons are replaced by corresponding codons found at equivalent sequence positions in the vWF DNA
sequence of one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients and which encode therein one or more amino acid mutations;
(B) inserting the DNA sequence so provided into a suitable vector to create a construct comprising an expression plasmid or viral expression vector, said construct being capable of directing the expression in cells of said monomeric subunit fragment or subfragment;
(C) transforming a host cell with said construct; and (D) culturing said transformed host cell under conditions which cause expression within said host cell of the monomeric subunit fragment or subfragment.
11. A process for producing a polypeptide useful for treating or inhibiting thrombosis, said polypeptide being patterned upon the wild type mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, and being derived therefrom as follows:
(A) providing a mutant vWF DNA sequence, said mutant sequence being characterized as encoding a mature vWF subunit, or a fragment thereof, the encoded polypeptide having, relative to the corresponding wild type polypeptide sequence, an increased binding affinity for one or more of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha., platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa or coagulation factor VIII;
(B) further mutagenizing the DNA sequence of (A) above so that the encoded polypeptide expressed therefrom has a lesser tendency to participate in disulfide-induced dimerization or multimerization than the polypeptide encoded by the DNA sequence of (A) above; and (C) expressing the further mutagenized DNA sequence of (B) above in a host cell from which an undimerized form of the encoded polypeptide may be extracted or secreted.
12. A polypeptide in purified form patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises the wild type amino acid sequence of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, in which, when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or more amino acid residues thereof are replaced by the corresponding residues found at the equivalent sequence positions of mature vWF subunit as isolated from one or more humans with Type IIB von Willebrand disease.
13. A polypeptide according to Claim 12 patterned upon a parent polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence of that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit beginning approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ending approximately at residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof.
14. A polypeptide according to Claim 12 which is glycosylated.
15. A polypeptide according to Claim 12 which contains one or more substitutions chosen from 550 (Cysteine), 511 (Tryptophan), 543 (Tryptophan), 553 (Methionine) and 561 (Aspartic acid).
16. A polypeptide in purified form patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises the wild type amino acid sequence of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, in which, when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or more amino acid residues thereof are replaced by one or more amino acid residues conferring upon the resultant polypeptide, relative to the parent polypeptide, an enhanced binding affinity for GPIb.alpha..
17. A polypeptide in purified form patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises the wild type amino acid sequence of mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, in which, when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or more amino acid residues thereof are deleted or are covalently labelled so that the resultant polypeptide has, relative to the parent polypeptide, an increased binding affinity for GPIb.alpha..
18. A process for generating a biologically active mutant amino acid sequence patterned upon wild type mature von Willebrand factor subunit or a fragment thereof, said sequence demonstrating relative to wild type subunit, or the said fragment thereof, an increased binding affinity for GPIb.alpha., and. comprising the steps of:
(A) providing a population of oligonucleotides corresponding to one or more mature vWF subunit DNA
subsequences and containing random mutations within one or more of the codons within said subsequences;

(B) using the resultant population of mutant oligonucleotides in a mutagenesis procedure with a vWF or vWF fragment-encoding DNA sequence as template thereby creating a random population of mutagenized sequences;
(C) inserting the mixture of mutagenized vWF or vWF
fragment-encoding DNA sequences into plasmids or vectors thereby creating a population of expression plasmids or viral expression vectors;
(D) inserting the resultant population of expression plasmids or viral expression vectors into suitable host cells;
(E) screening individual colonies or cultures of resultant host cells for expression of vWF-derived polypeptides having properties reflective of Type IIB vWF or of fragments thereof;
(F) having determined the DNA sequence of a vWF insert in a colony or culture of a host cell expressing vWF-derived polypeptide having said reflective properties;

(G) expressing the mutagenized DNA sequence, or an additional DNA sequence which is constructed to reflect the changes identified in the mutagenized sequence, in a host cell;
(H) isolating the mutant vWF-derived polypeptide produced thereby.
19. A mutant vWF-derived polypeptide having an amino terminus at approximately residue 441 (arginine} and a carboxy terminus at approximately residue 730 (asparagine) and having functional properties reflective of Type IIB vWF, said polypeptide being produced by the process of Claim 18.
20. A therapeutic composition which is effective in treating or inhibiting thrombosis which comprises (A) a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier; and (B) a polypeptide according to Claim 1 wherein said polypeptide is in monomeric form.
21. A purified DNA sequence encoding the fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit having an amino terminus at approximately residue 441 (arginine) and a carboxy terminus at approximately residue 733 (valine), or a subfragment thereof, in which one or more codons thereof are replaced by mutant codons corresponding at equivalent sequence positions to codons as isolated from the DNA of one or more humans with Type IIB von Willebrand disease.
22. An expression plasmid or viral expression vector containing DNA encoding a mutant mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, said encoding DNA
containing one or more codons specifying one or more amino acid sequence mutations found in mature von Willebrand factor subunit as determined from one or more Type IIB von Willebrand disease patients, said plasmid or vector being suitable for replication in a host cell and directing expression therein of said vWF subunit, or fragment thereof.
23. An expression plasmid or viral expression vector according to Claim 22 in which one or more of the cysteine codons normally present in the encoding DNA, within the region specifying approximately amino acid residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 733 (valine) thereof, are deleted or replaced by missense codons.
24. An expression plasmid or viral expression vector according to Claim 22 containing DNA encoding mature von Willebrand factor subunit, or a fragment thereof, said encoding DNA containing one or more codons specifying one or more of the following amino acid sequence mutations: 550 (Cysteine), 511 (Tryptophan), 543 (Tryptophan), 553 (Methionine) and 561 (Aspartic Acid).
25. A recombinant eucaryotic or procaryotic host cell transformed with an expression plasmid or viral expression vector according to Claim 22.
26. An antibody which is specific for von Willebrand factor subunit, or a polypeptide comprising a fragment thereof, said antibody being made by a process of immunizing animals with a polypeptide according to Claim 1 and then isolating the antibodies generated thereby.
27. A polypeptide patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit beginning approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ending approximately at residue 730 (asparagine) thereof, or a subfragment thereof, in which when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or more of the arginine, lysine or histidine residues within the 509 (cysteine) to 695 (cysteine) loop region thereof have been deleted or replaced by one or more amino acid residues having, at physiological pH, neutral or negatively charged residue side chains.
28. A polypeptide patterned upon a parent polypeptide which comprises that fragment of mature von Willebrand factor subunit beginning approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ending approximately at residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof, in which when compared to the parent polypeptide, one or more of the arginine, lysine or histidine residues within the 509 (cysteine) to 695 (cysteine) loop region thereof have been covalently labelled said residues thereafter possessing side chains which are neutral or negatively charged at physiological pH.
29. A method of treating or inhibiting thrombosis in a patient which comprises administering to such patient an effective amount of a therapeutic composition comprising (A) a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier; and (B) a monomeric polypeptide according to Claim 12.
30. A method of inhibiting aggregation of platelets which comprises contacting platelets with an effective amount of one or more therapeutic compositions according to Claim 1.
31. A polypeptide according to Claim 1 which has an increased binding affinity for platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha.
and which has been produced by mutagenesis of a region of a DNA sequence encoding mature subunit residues 469 (leucine) - 498 (aspartic acid) and/or 689 (glutamic acid) - 713 (valine).
32. A polypeptide substantially in pure form and patterned on wild type mature von Willebrand factor (vWF), or a fragment thereof, having one or more binding sites of predetermined affinity for one or more of the ligands selected from the group consisting of collagen, glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, platelet glycoprotein Ib.alpha., platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, or coagulation factor VIII, said polypeptide having a modified amino acid sequence relative to that of the wild type mature vWF, or a fragment thereof and also an increased binding affinity, relative to said predetermined affinity, for one or more of said ligands.
33. A method of treating or inhibiting thrombosis in a patient which comprises administering to such patient an effective amount of a therapeutic composition comprising (A) a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier; and (B) a monomeric polypeptide according to Claim 5.
34. A polypeptide according to Claim 1 wherein said subunit includes a region from residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment of said region and including a modified amino acid sequence within said region or within a subfragment of said region.
35. A polypeptide prepared by mutagenesis according to Claim 2 wherein said subunit includes a region from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment of said region and including a modified amino acid sequence within said region or within a subfragment of said region.
36. A process according to Claim 6 wherein said subunit or fragment includes a region from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to residue approximately 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment of said region and including within said region or a subfragment of said region one or more of said codons specifying one or more amino acid mutations.
37. A process for producing a polypeptide according to Claim 11 wherein said mutant vWF DNA sequence includes DNA
encoding a region from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment thereof.
38. A polypeptide according to Claim 16 wherein said subunit or said fragment includes a region from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment thereof and including within said region or a subfragment of said region one or more of said replaced amino acid residues.
39. A polypeptide according to Claim 17 wherein said subunit or said fragment includes a region from approximately residue 441 (arginine) to residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment thereof and including within said region or a subfragment of said region one or more of said deleted or covalently labelled amino acid residues.
40. An expression plasmid or viral expression vector according to Claim 22 wherein said DNA includes DNA
encoding a region from approximately residue 440 (arginine) to approximately residue 730 (asparagine) or a subfragment thereof of mature von Willebrand factor and including within said region or a subfragment thereof one or more of said codons specifying one or more amino acid sequence mutations.
41. A polypeptide according to Claim 32 patterned upon a parent polypeptide comprising the amino acid sequence of that fragment of vWF subunit beginning approximately at residue 441 (arginine) and ending approximately at residue 730 (asparagine), or a subfragment thereof, and including a modified amino acid sequence within said fragment or said subfragment.
CA 2107100 1991-03-27 1992-03-27 Therapeutic fragments of von willebrand factor Abandoned CA2107100A1 (en)

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CN110624105A (en) * 2019-09-24 2019-12-31 苏州大学 Sequences of structurally sensitive polypeptide antigens of von Willebrand factor

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US5847086A (en) * 1991-06-20 1998-12-08 Centeon L.L.C. Therapeutic fragments of von Willebrand factor
FR2686901A1 (en) * 1992-01-31 1993-08-06 Rhone Poulenc Rorer Sa NOVEL ANTITHROMBOTIC POLYPEPTIDES, THEIR PREPARATION AND PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS CONTAINING THEM.
US6197526B1 (en) * 1999-01-04 2001-03-06 Dyax Corp. Polypeptides for binding human factor VIII and fragments of human factor VIII
US7112438B2 (en) 1999-01-04 2006-09-26 Dyax Corp. Binding molecules for human factor VIII and factor VIII-like proteins
FI20010492A0 (en) * 2001-03-12 2001-03-12 Licentia Oy Identification of a new functional binding site for the platelet integrin alpha IIbbeta 3 in the von Willebrand factor A3 domain

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US4959314A (en) * 1984-11-09 1990-09-25 Cetus Corporation Cysteine-depleted muteins of biologically active proteins
WO1993000357A1 (en) * 1991-06-28 1993-01-07 Rhone-Poulenc Rorer International (Holdings) Inc. Therapeutic polypeptides based on von willebrand factor

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CN110624105A (en) * 2019-09-24 2019-12-31 苏州大学 Sequences of structurally sensitive polypeptide antigens of von Willebrand factor

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