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Title: Induction of membranous nephropathy in rabbits by administration of an exogenous cationic antigen. Author: Border WA, Ward HJ, Kamil ES, Cohen AH. Journal: J Clin Invest; 1982 Feb; 69(2):451-61. PubMed ID: 7056856. Abstract: We examined the role of antigenic electrical charge as a determinant of glomerular immune complex localization in the rabbit. Serum sickness nephritis was induced in groups of New Zealand white rabbits by daily 25-mg intravenous injections of bovine serum albumin (BSA) chemically modified to be cationic (pI > 9.5) or more anionic (pI, 3.5-4.6); an additional group received unmodified native BSA (pI, 4.5-5.1). Factors known to influence immune complex localization, e.g., molecular size of the administered antigen and resulting circulating immune complexes, immunogenicity, and disappearance time from the circulation were examined and found to be similar for both anionic and cationic BSA. Charge modification did increase the nonimmune clearance of cationic and anionic BSA compared with native BSA. Injected cationic BSA was shown in paired label experiments to bind directly to glomeruli compared with native BSA. The renal lesion produced by cationic BSA was markedly different from that found in rabbits given anionic or native BSA. Animals receiving cationic BSA uniformly developed generalized diffuse granular capillary wall deposits of IgG, C3, and BSA detected after 2 wk of injections and increasing until death at 6 wk. Qualitatively similar deposits were produced by the administration of low doses of cationic BSA of only 1 or 10 mg/d. In contrast, the injection of both anionic and native BSA resulted in mesangial deposits at 2 and 4 wk with capillary wall deposits appearing by 6 wk. Ultrastructural examination of animals receiving cationic BSA revealed pure, extensive formation of dense deposits along the lamina rara externa of the glomerular basement membrane whereas such deposits were absent or rare in animals injected with the anionic or native BSA. Albuminuria was significantly greater at 6 wk in the groups receiving cationic BSA with a mean of 280 mg/24 h compared with 53 mg/24 h in the combined groups injected with anionic or native BSA. Blood urea nitrogen values were similar in all groups at 2 and 4 wk but higher in the animals receiving cationic BSA at 6 wk. These experiments describe the reproducible induction of epimembranous immune deposits by administration of an exogenous cationic antigen. They suggest that antigenic charge can play an important role in the pathogenesis of membranous nephropathy by permitting direct glomerular binding of an antigen and predisposing to in situ immune complex formation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]