학술논문

Prevention of C5 activation ameliorates spontaneous and experimental glomerulonephritis in factor H-deficient mice.
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 6/20/2006, Vol. 103 Issue 25, p9649-9654. 6p.
Subject
*GLOMERULONEPHRITIS
*LABORATORY mice
*KIDNEY diseases
*SERUM
*BLOOD plasma
*THERAPEUTICS
Language
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) type II (dense deposit disease) is an inflammatory renal disease characterized by electron-dense deposits and complement C3 on the glomerular basement membrane. There is no effective therapy. We investigated the role of C5 activation in a model of MPGN that develops spontaneously in complement factor H-deficient mice (Cfh-/-). At 12 months there was a significant reduction in mortality, glomerular cellularity, neutrophil numbers, and serum creatinine levels in Cfh-/- mice deficient in C5. Excessive glomerular neutrophil numbers, frequently seen in patients with MPGN during disease flares, were also observed in Cfh-/- mice after the administration of an antiglomerular basement membrane antibody. This exaggerated injurious phenotype was absent in Cfh-/- mice deficient in C5 but not in Cfh-/- mice deficient in C6, indicating a key role for C5 activation in the induction of renal lesions. Importantly, the renal injury was completely reversed in Cfh-/- mice pretreated with an anti-murine CS antibody. These results demonstrate an important role for C5 in both spontaneous MPGN and experimentally induced nephritis in factor H-deficient mice and provide preliminary evidence that C5 inhibition therapy might be useful in human MPGN type II. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]