RENAL AND SYSTEMIC KAPPA LIGHT CHAIN DEPOSITS AND THEIR PLASMA-CELL ORIGIN IDENTIFIED BY IMMUNOELECTRON MICROSCOPY

  • 1 January 1986
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 122  (1) , 17-27
Abstract
Kappa light chain determinants were identified by immunoelectron microscopy in nodular glomerulosclerotic lesions and systemic interstitial deposits from a man who died several years after the onset of proteinuric renal failure treated by hemodialysis. He developed adrenal and hepatic failure preterminally but not overt malignant myeloma. Specific labeling was most concentrated over the inner aspect of glomerular basement membrane and the mesangium, which suggested that the protein was nonfiltrable. Tubular basement membrane labeling was densest over the outer aspect, which suggested that the protein perfused from the interstitium rather than from the tubular lumen. We identified the source of protein as a population of plasma cells present within bone marrow and renal interstitium; these showed specific immunogold labeling for kappa light chain protein over organelles concerned with protein synthesis secretion, and storage. This appears to be the first identification of light chain determinants in human interstitial para-amyloid deposits with the use of immunogold ultrastructural techniques in tissues prepared for electron microscopy by standard methods and stored as epoxy resin blocks.