Isolation of the tissue factor inhibitor produced by HepG2 hepatoma cells.

Abstract
Progressive inhibition of tissue factor activity occurs upon its addition to human plasma (serum). This process requires the presence of factor VII(a), factor X(a), Ca2+, and another component in plasma that we have called the tissue factor inhibitor (TFI). A TFI secreted by HepG2 cells (human hepatoma cell line) was isolated from a serum-free conditioned medium in a four-step procedure including CdCl2 precipitation, diisopropylphosphoryl-factor Xa affinity chromatography, Sephadex G-75 superfine in gel filtration, and Mono Q ion-exchange chromatography the purified TFI contained a predominant band at Mr 38,000 on NaDodSO4/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis that comigrates with inhibitory activity. Like the activity present in plasma, this TFI requires that presence of factor VII(a), factor X(a), and Ca2+ to express inhibitory activity. Its specific activity (assuming on extinction coeficient of 10 at 280 nM, for a 1-cm path length through a 1% solution) was 9800 units/mg of protein, where 1 unit of TFI activity was defined as that present in 1 ml of normal pooled serum.