Ultrastructural studies in passive in situ immune complex glomerulonephritis

1989; Volume: 58; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/bf02890068

Autores

M. Sasaki, Stephen Batsford, Friedrich Thaiss, Takashi Oite, A Vogt,

Tópico(s)

Reproductive System and Pregnancy

Resumo

Morphologic studies were performed in a passive model of in situ immune complex glomerulonephritis in rats. The formation and fate of subepithelial immune complexes as well as the role of glomerular polyanion in the induction of disease were examined. Unilateral in situ immune complex glomerulonephritis was induced in rats by perfusion of cationised horse spleen ferritin (pI greater than 9.5) (400 micrograms/rat) into the left kidney followed by systemic injection of 0.2 ml (= 400 micrograms precipitating antibody) of sheep anti-ferritin antiserum 2 h later. This schedule induced glomerulonephritis with proteinuria (mean maximum 100 mg/24 h between the 5th and the 12th day). Rats were sacrificed at intervals between 1 h and 42 days after induction of glomerulonephritis, samples of renal tissue were examined by light, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy (including staining of anionic sites by polyethyleneimine). The lesion induced closely resembled that of membranous glomerulonephritis in man as massive subepithelial deposits were seen with very little cellular infiltration or proliferation. The antigen (ferritin) deposits were initially located subepithelially; from 2 weeks onwards intramembranous deposits in the thickened basement membrane were present, the apparent translocation being due to excessive newly synthesised basement membrane material which encloses the deposits. A loss of anionic sites in the lamina rara interna, lamina rara externa and on the epithelial cell surface coat preceded the development of proteinuria.

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