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Comparative Study
. 2025 Sep;108(3):485-490.
doi: 10.1016/j.kint.2025.05.018. Epub 2025 Jun 7.

Evaluation of methodologies in anti-nephrin autoantibody detection

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Evaluation of methodologies in anti-nephrin autoantibody detection

Pan Liu et al. Kidney Int. 2025 Sep.

Abstract

Introduction: Recent studies discovered the prominent presence of anti-nephrin autoantibodies in minimal change disease (MCD) and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). However, widely different and often unconventional autoantibody detection methods were used in these studies, making it challenging to standardize anti-nephrin antibody detection and quantification across different studies.

Methods: Here, we compare methods of conventional ELISA, immunoprecipitation (IP)-based on-beads ELISA, immunoprecipitation-Western blotting (IP-WB), and cell- and tissue-based immunofluorescence staining with two cohorts totaling 169 patients and control individuals.

Results: Different assay methods and antigen preparations led to method-specific false-positive and false-negative results. In general, high-quality antigens produced in human cells, combined with IP-based assays, yielded the most robust and reliable results. Among 63 and 24 samples from patients with FSGS or MCD, respectively, two patients with FSGS showed strong antibody signals in both ELISA-based assays and IP-WB, while approximately half of patients with MCD had weak signals detectable only by IP-WB.

Conclusions: These findings highlight the importance of standardizing antibody detection methods.

Keywords: antigen epitope mapping; antinephrin autoantibody; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS); minimal change disease (MCD); recombinant nephrin.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure

Dr. Jin is a cofounder of Accubit LLC and an advisor to Alebund Biotechnology, Inc, and owns shares in Mannin Research Delaware subsidiary; all of these are outside the submitted work. All other authors have no conflict to declare.

Update of

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