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Title

Immunohistochemical distribution and quantification of crystal matrix protein.

Authors

Stapleton, Alan M. F.; Seymour, Anthony E.; Brennan, James S.; Doyle, Ian R.; Marshall, Villis R.; Ryall, Rosemary L.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the immunohistochemical distribution and quantification of crystal matrix protein (CMP). CMP, a 31 kDa glycoprotein, is the principal macromolecule found in calcium oxalate crystals generated in human urine, and is a potent inhibitor of crystal aggregation. A polyclonal rabbit anti-human CMP antibody was used to examine renal tissue by immunohistochemical techniques and fight microscopy (N = 45). Twenty-five other human organs were similarly assessed. Quantification was performed using a visual analogue scale. CMP was visible as cytoplasmic staining in the epithelial cells of the TALH and the distal convoluted tubule including the macula densa in a subgroup of nephrons. CMP was not identified elsewhere in the urinary tract or in the extrarenal organs examined. Despite a trend indicating that the kidneys of normal men had more CMP than those of normal women, the difference failed to reach significance (P = 0.11). There was, however, more CMP in the stone formers group compared with either normal men (P < 0.01) or normal women (P < 0.01). This protein may be an important determinant of calcium oxalate kidney stone disease.

Subjects

GLYCOPROTEINS; PROTEINS; CELL aggregation; IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY; CLUSTERING of particles; NEPHROLOGY

Publication

Kidney International, 1993, Vol 44, Issue 4, p817

ISSN

0085-2538

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/ki.1993.316

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