The autoimmune architecture of childhood idiopathic nephrotic syndrome
- PMID: 39571906
- DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2024.10.027
The autoimmune architecture of childhood idiopathic nephrotic syndrome
Abstract
Idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, the most common glomerular disorder in children, has long been considered an immune-mediated disease based on the efficacy of glucocorticoids at inducing remission. Nevertheless, the immune processes leading to podocytopathy have largely remained elusive. The success of B-cell depletion with rituximab, descriptions of B-cell dysregulation during active disease, and the most recent discovery of autoantibodies targeting the major podocyte antigen nephrin point to an autoimmune humoral etiology for idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Investigations of the immune factors involved in idiopathic nephrotic syndrome pathogenesis have uncovered common features with other autoimmune disorders that will aid in prognostication and in guiding the expansion of our glucocorticoid-sparing therapeutic arsenal. In this review, we discuss the emerging autoimmune architecture of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, with a specific focus on pediatric steroid-sensitive disease, including the podocyte-reactive B-cell response that causes anti-podocyte antibodies, the predisposing genetic factors that shape the podocyte-reactive immune landscape, and the immune triggers driving active disease.
Keywords: B cells; autoantibody; autoimmunity; nephrin; nephrotic syndrome; plasmablasts.
Copyright © 2024 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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