Immune complexes and complexity: investigating mechanisms of renal disease.
Jonathan A LindquistJosephine HildebrandtLars PhilipsenPeter R MertensPublished in: International urology and nephrology (2016)
The deposition of immune complexes is the causal factor in distinct renal pathologies, e.g., lupus nephritis and membranous nephritis. The location of these deposits within a tissue biopsy is often the key to establishing a diagnosis. However, how immune complexes come to be deposited below the vascular endothelium was, until now, a mystery, as was their contribution to inducing inflammation. A recent paper in Cell by Stamatiades et al. (Cell 164(4):991-1003, 2016) demonstrates the active transport of immune complexes by the vascular endothelial cells and an Fc receptor-dependent uptake by tissue-resident macrophages. This leads to the activation of these macrophages and the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, which in turn recruits immune cells from the blood into the kidney. The identification of these mechanisms should lead to a better stratification of kidney diseases and hopefully to the development of specific therapies.