Subepithelial deposits are a common feature of idiopathic membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN) and lupus membranous glomerulopathy (LMGN). We investigated the spatial arrangement of immunoglobulin G (IgG) and C3c fraction of complement (C3c) in the immune deposits of MGN and LMGN with confocal laser scanning microscopy to correlate specific patterns of IgG-C3 interactions with different diseases. Ten patients with MGN and 8 patients with LMGN (World Health Organization class VB) were selected. A determination of the spatial arrangement of the two fluorochromes and the glomerular area occupied by each fluorochrome was performed for each case. Our results showed MGN specimens have an orderly distribution of IgG and C3c, with each deposit showing an outer ring of sole IgG. IgG was always more abundant than C3c (1,619 +/- 271 v 790 +/- 105 micrometer(2), P = 0.002). In LMGN, IgG and C3c were haphazardly arranged, with deposits made of C3c only and an outer ring of IgG only rarely present. Also, the relative amounts of the two antigens were variable, and two groups could be identified (group 1: IgG, 5,515 +/- 1,179 micrometer(2) v C3c, 4,810 +/- 1,174 micrometer(2); P = 0.02; group 2: IgG, 3,358 +/- 658 micrometer(2) v C3c, 4,047 +/- 740 micrometer(2); P = 0.03). Our data show that diffuse IgG capping of the subepithelial immune deposits is diagnostic of MGN. The absence of an orderly three-dimensional arrangement in LMGN deposits (ie, outer ring of IgG) is likely to render active complement components more readily available to inflammatory activities.