Abstract

A 57-year-old woman with pulmonary sarcoidosis was admitted to the hospital because of an elevation of serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen. On admission, the laboratory data suggested interstitial nephritis without proteinuria and hematuria, whereas a renal biopsy showed granulomatous interstitial nephritis and mild mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis. Immunoglobulin and C1q deposits were negative, but mannose-binding lectin, C3, C4d, and C5b-9 deposits were marked in the glomerular mesangial areas. The lectin pathway of complement activation may have contributed to the development of glomerular injury in this patient. DNA of Propionibacterium acnes , which is now strongly suspected as the pathogen of sarcoidosis, was detected in the patient's glomerular mesangial cells; tubular epithelial cells, which were involved in granulomatous inflammation; and mononuclear cells in epithelioid granulomas by in situ hybridization. These findings may add new insights to the pathogenesis of renal sarcoidosis, including its relation to infection, because mannose-binding lectin plays a crucial role in the host defense against various pathogens. From this case of renal sarcoidosis, it is hypothesized that P acnes may be involved in pathogenesis of granulomatous interstitial nephritis and that it plays a role in glomerular complement activation via the lectin pathway.

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