Abstract

The present study was conducted to determine if Fx1A, a renal cortical extract used to induce Heymann nephritis, contains nephritogenic antigens in addition to the brush border-derived glycoprotein gp 330. Of 26 Lewis rats immunized with Fx1A, 24 developed abnormal proteinuria (greater than 20 mg/24 hr) by wk 10, whereas of 15 rats immunized with a partially purified gp 330 preparation (MVH), only one developed proteinuria. Immunofluorescence studies showed that all Fx1A rats developed large, diffuse, granular deposits along the glomerular basement membrane which stained brightly for IgG and C3; only 11 of the 15 MVH rats had definite deposits; in most rats, they were small and stained only moderately for IgG and faintly or not at all for C3. The Fx1A and MVH rats developed comparable levels of antibodies to MVH (gp 330) before the onset of proteinuria in Fx1A rats, after which serum IgG and antibody levels declined. In contrast, antibodies against soluble Fx1A antigens appeared earlier and rose more rapidly in Fx1A than in MVH rats. Larger amounts of IgG could be eluted from the glomeruli of Fx1A rats than from MVH rats. Eluates from the Fx1A rats contained antibodies that reacted with gp 330 and also a 95 kd antigen; the latter reactivity was not demonstrated in eluates of MVH rats. Immunoprecipitation studies showed that both gp 330 and the 95 kd antigen are components of normal glomeruli. The results show that immunization with Fx1A produces a more severe form of Heymann nephritis than does gp 330, and that Fx1A contains at least one nephritogenic antigen in addition to gp 330.

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