C3 nephritic factor (C3NeF) is an autoantibody against the C3 convertase which stabilizes this otherwise inherently labile neoenzyme and induces a continuous activation of the alternative pathway with C3 depletion. NeF is found in patients with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and/or partial lipodystrpohy. NeF activity is usually detected in plasma by hemolytic tests. In order to obtain reproducible data for the functional activity of purified C3NeF IgG a solid phase assay was developed. C3 convertase was generated on immobilized C3b by incubation with factors B and D in the presence of Ni(2+). Convertase sites were left to decay in the presence of normal IgG or NeF IgG. Residual convertase activity was measured by adding 125I-C3 and capturing nascent 125I-C3b on the plate surface via covalently coupled NH2-Glu-Tyr dipeptide. In the presence of factor H during C3 convertase decay, a dose dependent stabilizing activity was shown for NeF IgG including NeF IgG purified from urine. A second format of the assay was developed in which C3 convertase was assembled on C3b(2)-IgG complexes in the presence of Mg(2+). Since these complexes are more efficient as convertase precursors the signal was five-fold higher than with C3b. Convertase decay, on the other hand, was not influenced by the nature of the precursor and in both systems the stabilizing activity of NeF IgG was similar.