Abstract

A mouse monoclonal antibody (MCA-P1), which recognizes an antigenic determinant in human glomerular basement membrane against which autoantibodies are directed in Goodpasture's syndrome, was used in indirect immunofluorescence studies to investigate glomerular basement membrane structure in Alport's syndrome. We found reduced or absent binding of MCA-P1 to glomerular and distal tubular basement membranes in renal biopsy tissue from ten patients with Alport's syndrome. Antiglomerular basement membrane antibody eluted from the kidneys of a patient who had died from Goodpasture's syndrome was used to confirm these findings. In contrast, there was bright linear fluorescence of MCA-P1 on glomerular and tubular basement membranes of normal renal material and renal biopsy tissue obtained from patients with a variety of glomerulonephritides. These results suggest an abnormality or a variable quantity of the immunoreactive autoantigen in the glomerular basement membrane of patients with Alport's syndrome. Furthermore, MCA-P1 may be of value in the diagnostic interpretation of renal biopsies from patients with familial nephritis.

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