Recent studies discovered the prominent presence of anti-nephrin autoantibodies in minimal change disease, steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome and/or post-transplant recurrent focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). However, widely different, and often unconventional autoantibody detection methods were used among these studies, making it challenging to assess the pathogenic role for the antibodies. Here we examined methods of conventional ELISA, magnetic on-beads ELISA, immunoprecipitation-immunoblotting (IP-IB), and cell- and tissue-based antibody assays with 127 plasma samples of kidney and non-kidney diseases. On the antigen side, we compared commercially available recombinant human nephrin extracelluar domain (ECD) produced from human or mouse cell lines, as well as lab-made full length, ECD, and series of ECD truncates for measuring autoantibody reactivity and specificity. Surprisingly, different assay methods and different antigen preparations led to observation of assay-specific false-positive and false-negative results. In general, a set of tests that combines magnetic beads-enhanced ELISA, followed by IP-IB, and epitope mapping showed the most robust results for anti-nephrin autoantibodies, detected in two primary FSGS patients among all cases tested. It is interesting to note that cell/tissue-based results, also supported by antigen truncation studies, clearly suggest steric hindrance of reactive epitopes, as in full length nephrin that forms compact self-associated complexes. In conclusion, anti-nephrin positivity is rare among the tested patients (2/127), including those with FSGS (2/42), and autoantibody results can be affected by the choice of detection methods.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11360973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.25.605154DOI Listing

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