Abstract

Anti-phospholipase A2 receptor autoantibody (PLA2R-Ab) plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of primary membranous nephropathy (PMN), an autoimmune kidney disease characterized by immune deposits in the glomerular subepithelial spaces and proteinuria. However, the mechanism of how PLA2R-Abs interact with the conformational epitope(s) of PLA2R has remained elusive. PLA2R is a single transmembrane helix receptor containing ten extracellular domains that begin with a CysR domain followed by a FnII and eight CTLD domains. Here, we examined the interactions of PLA2R-Ab with the full PLA2R protein, N-terminal domain truncations, and C-terminal domain deletions under either denaturing or physiological conditions. Our data demonstrate that the PLA2R-Abs against the dominant epitope (the N-terminal CysR-CTLD1 triple domain) possess weak cross-reactivities to the C-terminal domains beyond CTLD1. Moreover, both the CysR and CTLD1 domains are required to form a conformational epitope for PLA2R-Ab interaction, with FnII serving as a linker domain. Upon close examination, we also observed that patients with newly diagnosed PMN carry two populations of PLA2R-Abs in sera that react to the denatured CysR-CTLD3 (the PLA2R-Ab1) and denatured CysR-CTLD1 (the PLA2R-Ab2) domain complexes on Western blots, respectively. Furthermore, the PLA2R-Ab1 appeared at an earlier time point than PLA2R-Ab2 in patients, whereas the increased levels of PLA2R-Ab2 coincided with the worsening of proteinuria. In summary, our data support that an integrated folding of the three PLA2R N-terminal domains, CysR, FnII, and CTLD1, is a prerequisite to forming the PLA2R conformational epitope and that the dominant epitope-reactive PLA2R-Ab2 plays a critical role in PMN clinical progression.

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