Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10047659 | American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Commercial serological assays for the presence of anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibodies are thought to be indicative of Goodpasture's syndrome. We report a case in which commercial tests inaccurately suggested that a patient with a pulmonary-renal syndrome had Goodpasture's disease. Additional laboratory testing using recombinant type IV collagen NC1 domain proteins showed that the autoantibodies in question were not directed against the Goodpasture antigen (the α3NC1 domain), but against the α2NC1 domain of type IV collagen. Our findings represent the first known case of human autoantibodies to the α2NC1 domain. Further investigation showed that this patient has decreased α3 and α5 chain expression in the GBM and defects in type IV collagen, resembling abnormalities in patients with Alport's syndrome.
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Authors
David MD, Brian BS, Hikaru MD, PhD, Stephen MD, Gerald MD, Randy MD, Raghu PhD,