The pathogenesis of Alport syndrome involves type IV collagen molecules containing the α3(IV) chain: Evidence from anti-GBM nephritis after renal transplantation

Billy G. Hudson, Raghuram Kalluri, Sripad Gunwar, Manfred Weber, Fernando Ballester, Julie K. Hudson, Milton E. Noelken, Michael Sarras, Walter R. Richardson, Juan Saus, Dale R. Abrahamson, Alan D. Glick, Michael A. Haralson, J. Harold Helderman, William J. Stone, Harry R. Jacobson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

91 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mutations in the COL4A5 collagen gene have been implicated as the primary defect in Alport syndrome, a heritable disorder characterized by sensorineural deafness and glomerulonephritis that progresses to end-stage renal failure. In the present study the molecular nature of the defect in Alport glomerular basement membrane (GBM) was explored using anti-GBM alloantibodies (tissue-bound and circulating) produced in three Alport patients subsequent to renal transplantation. The alloantibodies bound to the α3(IV)NC1 domain of type IV collagen and not to any other basement membrane component. In tissue sections, the alloantibodies bound specifically to peripheral GBM in normal kidney and the affected renal transplant but not to that of Alport kidney. These results establish that: the α3 chain in type IV collagen molecules, the Goodpasture autoantigen, is the target alloantigen in post-transplant anti-GBM nephritis in patients with Alport syndrome, and that a molecular commonality exists in the pathogenesis of anti-GBM nephritis causing loss of renal allografts in patients with Alport syndrome and renal failure in patients with Goodpasture syndrome. These findings implicate: (1) defective assembly of type IV collagen molecules containing the α3(IV) chain in Alport GBM; and (2) the existence of a mechanism linking the assembly of molecules containing the α3(IV) chain with those containing the α5(IV) chain.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)179-187
Number of pages9
JournalKidney International
Volume42
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1992

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Nephrology

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