Platelets mediate neutrophil-dependent immune complex nephritis in the rat

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Abstract

Neutrophils and platelets are frequently present in glomeruli in immune glomerulonephritis (GN). No role for the platelet in acute neutrophil-mediated renal injury has been defined. We investigated a neutrophil-mediated model of subendothelial immune complex GN in the rat. Rats were platelet-depleted (mean platelet < 10,000/μl) with goat anti-platelet IgG before induction of GN by the renal artery perfusion of concanavalin A followed by anti-concanavalin A IgG. Platelet-depletion resulted in a significant reduction in albuminuria (7 ± 2 vs. 55 ± 10 mg/24 h) and fractional albumin excretion (0.045 ± 0.01 vs. 0.410 ± 0.09) compared with controls. The decrease in albuminuria was not due to differences in blood or glomerular neutrophil counts, complement, renal function, or glomerular antibody binding. Platelet-depleted rats had equivalent subendothelial deposits and glomerular endothelial cell injury but had minimal platelet infiltrates and fibrin deposition compared with controls. These studies demonstrate a role for platelets in mediating acute neutrophil-induced glomerular injury and proteinuria in this model of GN.

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APA

Johnson, R. J., Alpers, C. E., Pritzl, P., Schulze, M., Baker, P., Pruchno, C., & Couser, W. G. (1988). Platelets mediate neutrophil-dependent immune complex nephritis in the rat. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 82(4), 1225–1235. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI113720

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