Nephron Flashcards

1
Q

lumen voltages: early PT, late PT, TAL, distal tubule, CD

A

early PT negative (due to electrogenic Na-glucose/AA); late PT positive (due to Cl- leaving lumen paracellularly > bicarb entering lumen paracellularly b/c Cl more permeable); TAL positive (due to NK2Cl -> 2 cations and 2 anions reabs, but K recycles into lumen via ROMPK therefore net loss of negative charge); DT positive (due to Cl- uptake via NCC and K recycling into lumen via Kv1.1); CD very negative (due to ENAC)

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2
Q

tubular fluid concentration of inulin, Cl, Na, bicarb, AA, glucose along PT

A

inulin concentration steadily rises as water is reabsorbed; Cl- concentration rises initially as water is reabsorbed but then levels off as Cl- is absorbed paracellularly in late PCT (not absorbed proximally b/c bicarb is absorbed); Na concentration rises very little yet steadily along PT as both Na and water are reabsorbed (water a bit more than Na, but not much); bicarb concentration drops early as NaHCO3 reabs in early PT (most reabs by end of PT, but not at all); AA and glucose concentration drop very suddenly, and pretty much all reabs by end of PT

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3
Q

Cl reabsorption in PT (3)

A

Cl is the anion that balances Na reabs in PT; Cl reabs mostly paracellular in early PT driven by neg lumen created by electrogenic Na-glucose/AA reabs (not much reabs here b/c HCO3 being reabs w/ Na); Cl reabs transcellular (enter cell transcellularly by counterexchanging w/ organic anions, leaves cell thru Cl channel and prob K-Cl cotransporters) and paracellular (due to high Cl in tubule b/c all HCO3 reabs in early PT) in late PT

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4
Q

Cl reabs in TAL mechs (2)

A

all transcellular into cell via NK2Cl and out of cell via Cl- channels

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5
Q

NaCl reabs in CD (3)

A

Na reabs via ENaC (none paracellularly); Cl reabs paracellularly due to large lumen neg V (created by ENaC) and transcellularly via Cl-HCO3 antitransport on beta IC cells

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6
Q

Na reabs throughout nephron (%)

A

67% filtered load reabs in PT, 23% load in TAL, 5% in DT, 3% in CD, .5% excreted

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7
Q

Na reabs in PT mechs (7)

A

Na reabs via Na synporter w/ glucose, phosphate, sulfate, or organic acids, Na reabs via Na/H antiporter; Na leaves cell via Na/K pump and Na/HCO3 cotransporter; Na backleaks paracellularly due to lumen neg voltage in early PT; Na reabs paracellularly via solvent drag (backleak predominates over solvent drag); in late PT, Na reabs paracellularly due to lumen pos voltage

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8
Q

Na reabs in TAL mechs (3)

A

Na enter cells via NK2Cl and NaH antiporter, leaves cell via Na/K pump; Na also reabs paracellularly due to lumen positive voltage (created by ROMPK)

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9
Q

Mg absorption in nephron (%)

A

15-25% reabs in PT (exception to most solutes) - doesn’t seem to be mediated by claudin or other proteins ; 60-70% reabs in TAL (paracellular due to positive lumen); 5-10% reabs distally (mostly CCD, with active reabs via TRPM6 in early DCT)

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10
Q

Ca abs in PT

A

50-60% filtered load reabs in late PT when lumen becomes positive; claudin-2 functions as paracellular calcium channel

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11
Q

Mg and Ca abs in DT

A

Mg and Ca active reabs only takes place at DT; active Mg transport is confined to DCT1 and DCT2 (early DCT) via TRPM6, while active Ca transport is confined to DCT2 and CNT (late DCT) via TRPV5 (leaves cell basolaterally via NCX1 and PMCA1b)

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12
Q

TRPM6

A

Mg active reabs via this apical channel in early DCT

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13
Q

TRPV5

A

Ca active reabs via this apical channel in late DCT

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14
Q

NCX1

A

Ca leaves DCT cell via this basolateral channel (along w/ PMCA1b) in late DCT

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15
Q

PMCA1b

A

Ca leaves DCT cell via this basolateral channel (along w/ NCX1) in late DCT

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16
Q

HCO3- reabsorption locations (%)

A

PCT reabsorbs 80% filtered load, TAL reabsorbs 10-15%, rest absorbed in DCT and distal nephron; fractional excretion < .01%

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17
Q

K reabsorption throughout kidney (%s)

A

prox nephron not regulated: 80% in PT, 10% in TAL; collecting duct regulated: in hyperkalemia, 20-180% can be secreted in initial collecting duct (20-40% will be reabsorbed again in CD despite hyperkalemia) -> total 10-150% filtered load excreted, vs. in hypokalemia, 2% will be reabsorbed in initial CD w/ 6% reabs in late CD -> total 2% filtered load excreted

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18
Q

K handling in PT (3)

A

in early prox tubule, reabs paracellularly due to solvent drag and concentration gradient ([K] in tubule incr as water reabs); in late tubule, small positive lumen V drives K reabs paracellularly; there is minimal secretion to lumen through luminal K channels

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19
Q

K handling in loop of Henle: thin descending limb, thin ascending limb, TAL

A

K passively secreted in thin descending limb (driven by high K permeability and high medullary K concentration); K passively reabs in thin ascending limb (this traps K in medullary interstitium -> incr capacity to secr K in distal tubule and CD during hyperkalemia); TAL reabs K both actively (accounts for 50%, via NK2Cl) and passively (accounts for 50%, due to positive lumen), some reabs K is secreted back into lumen through ROMPK while some exits the cell basolaterally

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20
Q

reabs and secretion of K in CD - what cells/channels are responsible?

A

principal cells secr K through aldo-sensitive channels and thru apical K-Cl synporter (driven by concentration gradient maintained by fast urine flow and by neg lumen V est by ENAC Na reabs); alpha IC cells reabs K through HK antiporter channels

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21
Q

HCO3- reabsorption mechanism in PCT and TAL

A

H+ secreted through NaH antiporter (driven by low Na in cell established via basolateral NaK pump) and through H+ ATPase; H+ combines w/ HCO3- to form CO2 + water (reaction sped up by brush border CA); CO2 diffuses across membrane where it is turned back into HCO3 + H+ by intracellular CA; H+ is re-secreted to tubule while HCO3 is transported across basolateral membrane to plasma via Na/HCO3 synporter (full PCT and TAL) as well as Cl-HCO3 antiporter and K-HCO3 symporter in late PT and TAL

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22
Q

GT balance

A

at constant RPF, PT reabs of Na is directly proportional to Na filtration -> this is important so that changes in filtration fraction do not cause changes in Na excretion; this occurs b/c more filtration = more water in tubule = less water in plasma = higher oncotic pressure and lower hydrostatic pressure in efferent = more water reabs = more Na reabs via solvent drag

23
Q

effects on GFR by Ag II, NE/epi, endothelin, prostaglandins, NSAIDs, NO

A

Ag II constricts efferent, therefore decr RPF but incr GFR (works to maintain GFR in hypovolemia); NE/epi constricts afferent (and also decr Kf), therefore decr RPF and GFR; endothelin decr Kf (mesangial contraction) and constricts both aff and eff -> decr both RPF and GFR; prostaglandins (PGE2 and prostacyclin) dilate afferent -> incr RPF and GFR; NSAIDs block PGE2, so NSAIDs constrict afferent and thus decr RPF and GFR (only important in disease states, b/c PGE2 only imp to maintain GFR in disease states); NO dilates afferent -> incr RPF and GFR;

24
Q

renal effects of Ag II

A

constricts efferent arteriole -> decr RPF and incr GFR -> incr FF -> incr peritublar cap oncotic P and decr hydrostatic P -> more PT Na reabs; constricts efferent -> decr vasa recta flow -> decr urea washout from medullary interstitium -> more urea, therefore less Na in medullary interstitium -> incr gradient for passive NaCl reabs by thin ascending limb

25
Q

NE effects (3)

A

constricts afferent -> decr RPF and GFR; stims renin release; stims PCT Na reabs by activating NaH antiporters and Na/K basolateral pumps

26
Q

ADH effects (3)

A

aquaporins in CD; stims NK2CL in TAL (required for maintaining hypertonicity of medullary interstitium); incr number of ENaC (thus can play a role in restoring euvolemia under v. hypovolemic conditions, even though normally works only to restore isotonicity)

27
Q

natriuretic hormones (4)

A

ANP, dopamine, prostaglandins, endogenous digitalis-like hormones

28
Q

calculating RPF

A

RPF - RBF(1-Hct)

29
Q

Kf

A

in Starling equation; reflects the hydraulic permeability of the membrane and the effective surface area; much larger in glomerulus than in other capillaries; reduced in kidney disease (reduction in surface area) and due to Ag II, AVP, some prostaglandins (trigger mesangial cell contraction and thus alter both permeability and surface area)

30
Q

GFR along cap segment, effects of RPF on GFR

A

GFR decr along segment b/c cap oncotic P rises along segment; incr in RPF makes oncotic P rise less so makes GFR greater (net ultrafiltration is greater)

31
Q

relationship btwn RPF and GFR

A

above normal RPF, increasing RPF further doesn’t incr GFR much; however, below normal RPF, decreasing RPF further decr GFR a lot (linear relationship)

32
Q

FF: define, normal value

A

FF = GFR/RPF; normal = 20%

33
Q

autoregulation

A

mediated by myogenic response (as afferent arterioles are stretched due to high BP, they constrict to restrict RPF) and by tubuloglomerular feedback)

34
Q

tubuloglomerular feedback

A

as GFR incr, FF incr, NaCl in distal tubule incr, macula densa detects incr NaCl and sends signal (via cation channels, calcium, ATP, adenosine) to constrict afferent arteriole and return GFR to normal

35
Q

filtered load equation

A

GFR x Px x Fx (Px is plasma concentration of solute, Fx is filterability of solute = 1 for freely filtered substances)

36
Q

clearance equation

A

clearance = UxV/Px

37
Q

fractional excretion equation

A

FE = clearance/GFR = (Ux/Px)/(Ucr/Pcr)

38
Q

using creatinine clearance and urea clearance to estimate GFR

A

creatinine is secreted (10-20%), so clearance > GFR (altho errors in measuring creatinine are about 10-20% so it usually cancels out) , thus Ccr overestimates GFR (more secreted at decr GFR, so Ccr overestimates GFR even more at low GFR); urea is reabsorbed, so clearance < GFR, thus Curea underestimates GFR

39
Q

NaK pump activity throughout nephron

A

most in DCT > TAL > PCT > CD > loop

40
Q

V gradient along PT

A

originally neg b/c Na reabs (i.e. w/ glucose), then pos b/c Cl- diffuses out more than bicarb diffuses in

41
Q

water permeability throughout nephron

A

highest in PT (esp PST), then thin descending limb, then CD (if ADH active); thus don’t need large concentration difference to produce very high rate of water reabs in PT

42
Q

glucose reabs

A

SGLT2 is high capacity low affinity apical transporter w/ 1:1 Na:glucose stoichiometry that is responsible for the bulk of the glucose transport in PCT (mutations cause glucosuria); SGLT1 is low capacity high affinity apical transporter w/ 2:1 Na:glucose that is responsible for “mopping up” in PST (mutations have little effect); GLUT sends glucose from cell into interstitial fluid

43
Q

phosphate reabsorption: where, how, what inhibits reabs (4), what increases reabs (3)

A

80% in PT, mediated by Na-Pi cotransporters; PTH, high Pi intake, FGF-23, and acidosis all inhibit Pi reabsorption; Vit D, phosphate deficiency, and GH all incr Pi reabsorption –> Pi is one of the only solutes where PT reabsorption is regulated

44
Q

protein reabsorption in PT

A

megalin, cubulin, and amnionless in PT mediate reabs of filtered proteins via receptor-mediated endocytosis (proteins are delivered to lysosome -> degradation -> recycling)

45
Q

urea reabs in PT

A

via paracellullar pathway in PT (no specific transporters)

46
Q

fluid entering loop: Na, Cl, glucose, AA, protein, K, ammonium

A

[Na] same as plasma (isotonic reabs in PT b/c leaky epithelium); [Cl-] higher than plasma b/c bicarb reabs > Cl- reabs in PT; no glucose, AA, protein (all reabs in PT); rich in K b/c secreted into PST (minor); rich in NH4 b/c synthesized in PT

47
Q

thin descending vs ascending limb

A

descending is permeable to water but not salt (water leaves tubule); ascending is permeable to salt but not water (salt leaves tubule)

48
Q

fluid leaving thin ascending limb and entering TAL: NaCl, water, Ca, K, glucose, Pi, Mg, bicarb

A

75% filtered load NaCl reabs (60% in PT, 15% in thin limbs), 75% water reabs (60% PT, 15% thin limbs), 75% Ca reabs (60% PT, 15% thin limbs), 90% K reabs, 100% gluc reabs, 90% Pi reabs, 20% Mg reabs, 100% bicarb reabs

49
Q

ammonia movement in nephron

A

ammonia generated in PT, reabsorbed in TAL (instead of K in NK2CL) and deposited into medullary interstitium, this leads to high NH4 concentration in interstitium, NH3 diffuses down its gradient into CD where it combines w/ H+ to form trapped ammonia, ammonia enters cells on NaK pump and then is sent into lumen w/ H+; if H+ secr is impaired, NH4 excr will be impaired and NH4 will be reabs -> liver -> turned into urea, which consumes bicarb (net acid change = 0 bad!)

50
Q

reabs in TAL %: NaCl, water, Ca, gluc, Pi, Mg, bicarb, NH3

A

25% load of NaCl reabs, no water reabs, 20% Ca reabs, no gluc reabs, no Pi reabs, 70% Mg reabs, no bicarb reabs, 90% NH3 reabs (synth in PT, enters interstitium from TAL, then goes in CD)

51
Q

fluid entering distal tubule: tonicity, K, NH4, bicarb, Ca, Mg, NaCl

A

hypotonic, very little K and NH4, no bicarb, moderate amt of Ca and Mg, about 10% of filtered NaCl

52
Q

fluid leaving DCT: tonicity, NaCl, K, Ca, Mg, bicarb

A

hypotonic, less NaCl, little if any K, minimal Ca and Mg, little if any bicarb

53
Q

where is Ca actively reabs?

A

late DCT via TRPV5 (leaves cell basolaterally via NCX1 and PMCA1b)

54
Q

where is Mg actively reabs?

A

early DCT via TRPM6