Tubular Reabsorption Flashcards

1
Q

Trans-epithelial transport

A
  1. Substance leaves the tubular fluid by crossing the liminal membrane
  2. Must pass through the cytosol
  3. Cross the basolateral membrane of the tubular cell to the interstitial fluid
  4. Diffuse through the interstitial fluid
  5. Penetrate the capillary wall to enter the blood plasma
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2
Q

Where is sodium reabsorbed?

A

65% proximal tubule
25% loop of henle
4-8% distal and collecting tubule

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3
Q

What is the role of sodium reabsorption in the proximal tubule?

A

Reabsorbing glucose, amino acids, H2O, Cl and urea

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4
Q

What is the role of sodium reabsorption in the ascending limb of the loop of henle?

A

Kidney’s ability to produce urine of varying concentrations and volumes
Depends on the body’s need to conserve or eliminate H2O
Also Cl reabsorption

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5
Q

What is the role of sodium reabsorption in the distal and collecting tubules?

A

Variable and subject to hormonal control
Regulates ECF volume- important in long-term control of arterial blood pressure

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6
Q

What is essential for Na reabsorption in the basolateral membrane?

A

An active Na-K ATPase pump

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7
Q

_____ of the total energy spent by the kidney is spent on running the _______

A

80%
Na/K ATPase pump

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8
Q

Steps in Na-K pump

A
  1. Na passively moves from the lumen (high concentration) into the cell across lumina border
  2. Extrudes Na from cell and builds up the concentration of Na in the lateral space
  3. Na diffuses down concentration gradient into the lateral space into the interstitial fluid
  4. From the fluid into the capillary
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9
Q

What is Na followed by?

A

Water
It’s passively reabsorbed throughout the length of the proximal tubule, it follows osmotically

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10
Q

How much water is passively reabsorbed?

A

65% is passively reabsorbed by the end of the proximal tubule
117 L a day

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11
Q

How does H2O pass?

A

Primarily through Aquaporin 1 water channel

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12
Q

How is the return of filtered H2O to the plasma enhanced?

A

By the fact that the plasma colloid osmotic pressure is greater in the peritubular capillaries

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13
Q

What else is active reabsorption responsible for?

A

The passive reabsorption of urea and chloride

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14
Q

How much urea passively reaborbed?

A

50%

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15
Q

How are chloride ions reabsorbed down the electrical gradient?

A

By active reabsorption of the sodium ions

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16
Q

Substances with a molecular weight of ____ are freely filtered at the glomerulus

A

10 kDa

17
Q

What does the proximal tubule absorb?

A

Filtered peptides and low-molecular weight proteins

18
Q

How are filtered proteins degraded?

A

Degraded to amino acids by peptidases in the proximal tubule brush border
Reabsorbed by co-transport with Na+ across the apical plasma membrane

19
Q

What are the low molecular weight proteins?

A

Insulin
Glucagon
Parathyroid hormone
Microglobulinuria

20
Q

How are the low molecular weight proteins taken up?

A

At the apical plasma membrane by receptor-mediated endocytosis

21
Q

Steps to receptor mediated endocytosis

A
  1. Low molecular weight proteins taken up at apical plasma membrane by receptor-mediated endocytosis
  2. Proteins bind with meaglin and cubilin in plasma membrane and undergo endocytosis
  3. Endocytosed proteins are delivered to lysosomes and degraded
  4. Released amino acids are transported to the capillaries
22
Q

Glomerular proteinuria

A

Glomerulus not working properly
Albumin is going through glomerulus not being filtered
Albumin in the urine

23
Q

Proximal Tubule proteinuria

A

Normal proteins being filtred through glomerulus
Proteins can’t be absorbed because of blockage
They’re not reabsorbed, in the urine