Reabsorption Flashcards

1
Q

Overview of reabsorption in the nephron tubule (and collecting duct): PCT

A
  • (R) of ~65% water, Na+, K+, Ca2+
  • 90% HCO3
  • 100% organic nutrients
  • ~50% urea reabsorbed
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2
Q

Overview of reabsorption in the nephron tubule (and collecting duct): LOH

A
  • (R) of 15% water
  • 20-30% Na+, Ca2+
  • 10% HCO3
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3
Q

Overview of reabsorption in the nephron tubule (and collecting duct): DCT

A
  • variable water (~15%)
  • variable (R) of Na+ + Ca2+
    (under hormonal control)
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4
Q

Overview of reabsorption in the nephron tubule (and collecting duct): CD + papillary duct

A

CD
- variable (R) of water, K+, Na+, H+ and HCO3

Papillary duct
- ~50% urea (R)

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5
Q

Proximal convoluted tubule - micro-villi

A

Proximal convoluted tubule: - epithelial cells are large, square shaped + big nuclei + also have micro-villi

  • Micro-villi are increasing the inside surface area = allowing greater amount of surface area to come into contact with the filtrate = sign of getting a lot of reabsorption
  • Most reabsorption takes place in the proximal convoluted tubule = great reabsorber
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6
Q

What is trans-epithelial transport

A

= utilising pumps and channels

  • solutes are (R) via this transport
  • the (R) is highly specific
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7
Q

Secondary active transport +

Osmosis

A
  • utilises energy indirectly from “other” concen. gradients e.g. glucose uses the [Na+] gradient
  • cotransport, counter-transport, antiport

Osmosis

  • diffusion of water, follows concen gradients, especially (Na+) = uses aquaporins
  • solutes are “water magnets”
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8
Q

Tubular (R) includes trans-epithelial transport:

A
  • neph tubule wall made up of a single layer of epithelial cells = aka tubular epithelium
  • on one side of the epithelial cell is the neph tubule lumen, containing tubular fluid + other side is the interstitial fluid
  • (R) = transport of material from the tubular fluid across the epithelium to the IF and then into the blood in the peritubular capillary
  • the cell mem facing tubule lumen (luminal/apical mem) contains dif channels to the CM facing IF (basolateral mem)
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9
Q

What does tubular (R) rely on?

A
  • Tubular (R) relies on active transport of Na+
  • The first step of tubular (R) is a problem. The TF + the IF are basically the same thing (both made from capillary filtration).
  • = no concen gradients. What is the driving force?
  • Tubular (R) relies on the large [Na+] gradient b/w the extracellular fluid + the intracellular fluid of the epithelial cells generated by the Na+-K+ATPase
  • This [Na+] gradient is crucial in driving all (R) in the nephron tubule
    → Blockade of the Na+-K+ATPase w/ the drug ouabain stops all tubular (R)
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10
Q

Na+ reabsorption via primary active transport

A
  1. Na+ is pumped out the basolateral side of cell by the Na+K+ATPase into the IF, reducing intracellular [Na+]
    - the [Na+] in the IF then moves into the blood stream
  2. Na+ enters cell through membrane proteins, moving down its electrochemical gradient
    - The [Na+]tf is higher than that in the [Na+]i –> pressure of [Na+] that drives diffusion of Na+ from the TF into the epithelial cells via Na+ channels
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11
Q

This (R) of Na+ from the tubular fluid is utilised in 2 ways:

A
  • i. it sets up electrochemical gradients for other solute to be reabsorbed.
  • ii. the diffusion of Na+ can be used indirectly to drive the movt of other solutes (secondary active transport)
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12
Q

(i) (R) of Na+ sets up electrochemical gradients that drive (R) of other solutes

A
  1. Na+ is (R) by active transport
  2. Electrochemical gradient drives anion (R)
  3. Water moves by osmosis, following solute (R)
  4. Concentrations of other solutes increase as fluid vol. in lumen decreases (K+, Ca2+, urea). Permeable solutes are (R) by diffusion.
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13
Q

(ii) secondary active transport of glucose

A
  • 100% of glucose is (R) in the PT, against its concen gradient via cotransport w/ Na+
  • The energy from the diffusion of Na+ (going w/ its [Na+] gradient) is sufficient to “drag” the glucose w/ it, via the sodium & glucose cotransporter (SGLT)
  • Na+-cotransport in the PT is used to reabsorb other organic solutes, such as amino acids
  • A similar process is used to secrete H+ into the TF, via a Na+-H+ exchanger (an antiport).
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14
Q

(R) of HCO3- in the PT

A
  • (R) of bicarbonate from nephron is important for acid-base balance.
  • However, bicarbonate cannot cross the apical membrane of the PT.

How to reabsorb??

  • CO2 can freely diffuse across the apical membrane into the epithelial cell.
  • So the bicarbonate combines with H+ using the carbonic anhydrase reaction in reverse
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15
Q

(R) in LOH

A
  • The two limbs of the LoH have very dif permeability characteristics

Descending limb

  • is permeable to water but impermeable to ions
  • selectively reabsorbs water

Ascending Limb

  • is permeable to ions but impermeable to water
  • selectively reabsorbs solute (Na+, K+, Cl-, Ca2+)
  • especially via Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransporter (ATP pump)
  • Because of the NaK2Cl pump more solute is reabsorbed than water
    → TF is more dilute (hypo-osmotic) when it reaches the DCT
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16
Q

DCT + CD (R)

A
  • provide “fine tuning” of (R) under hormone control

(R) of H2O

  • regulated by vasopressin (ADH) in CD (& DT)
  • regulation of no. of water pores (aquaporins) in epithelium

(R) of Na+

  • Two paths for Na+ (R), one is constitutive (Na+-Cl- symport),
  • the other regulated by aldosterone (Na+-K+ antiport).

(R) of Ca2+

  • constitutive: 65% Ca2+ reabsorbed in PT, 20% in LoH
  • In DT Ca2+ (R) is regulated by parathyroid hormone (PTH).
  • A decrease in plasma [Ca2+] → secretion of PTH.
  • PTH causes a Ca2+ channel to be inserted into apical membrane that ↑Ca2+ (R) (similar to the insertion of Na+ channel by aldosterone)