4: Renal Transport II: K, Ca, P04, organic acid and peptide transport Flashcards

1
Q

How much K+ is reabsorbed by the PT and thick ascending limb of the loop?

A

PT: 67% of K+ reabsorbed
Thick ascending limb: 20% of K+ reabsorbed

*K reabsorption is not regulated in the PT and thick AL of the loop so these numbers are constant

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

How are potassium intake and excretion balanced by the kidney?

A
  • Regulation of K+ secretion by the principal cells of the late DT and CD is the main mechanism by which K+ intake and excretion are balanced
  • This is UNUSUAL: all other ions are balanced by modulating reabsorption.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

K+ depleted state: what if we need to absorb more K than the constant amount retrieved by the PT and thick ascending limb?

A
  • Intercalated cells can reabsorb K+
  • Have proton-potassium ATPase which couples acid secretion to potassium uptake
  • But in western diets we usually have excess potassium so this isn’t active often.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Potassium reabsorption and secretion by the RT in normal and excess K+ states

A
  • Reabs in PT and thick ascending limb unchanged (67% and 20%)
  • K+ Secretion by intercalated cells can range from 1% to 42% in the DT and 1% to 25% in the collecting duct

(Doubt we need to know the secretion numbers)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

How is potassium secreted by principal cells?

A
  • Principal cells have apical K+ channels which allow potassium to be secreted passively
  • Remember potassium is maintained at a high intracellular concentration by the Na/K ATPase
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

How is K+ secretion in principal cells modulated?

A
  1. increase K+ channel activity
  2. Increase Na+ channel activity
  3. Increase Na/K ATPase activity

*Aldosterone causes all three mechanisms to occur. So increased aldosterone favors increased K+ secretion.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What effect does furosemide have on K+ secretion?

A
  • Furosemide inhibits the Na/K/2Cl cotransporter in the thick ascending limb of the loop which results in:
    1. decreased K reabsorption
    2. Increased Na delivery (principal cells “see” more sodium–>more sodium going in, more potassium going out)
    3. Therefore, results in increased K+ excretion for two reasons
  • Thus Furosemide is a K+ “wasting diuretic”. These reasons also explain why Bartter’s syndrome is characterized by hypokalemia
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Effect of Thiazide Diuretics on K+ secretion

A

Thiazide:

  1. decreases Na/Cl cotransporter activity in early DT
  2. Increased Na+ delivery to principal cells
  3. More Na in RT lumen, more Na flowing into principal cells and more K+ flowing out into RT lumen
    - Results in more K+ excretion (another K “wasting” diuretic)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Effect of Amiloride on K+ secretion

A

Amiloride: K+ “sparing” diuretic

  • Decreases activity of sodium channels in principal cells of DT/CD
  • So More sodium in RT lumen, making it harder for K+ to flow out of principal cells and into the lumen, decreasing K+ secretion
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What effect does Liddle’s syndrome have on Potassium levels?

A

Liddle’s syndrome: GOF mutation: increases activity of apical Na+ channels in principal cells
-This will increase potassium secretion and excretion, resulting in hypokalemia

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Ca2+ function and distribution

A
  • Bones contain 99% of the bodies Ca
  • 1% of total body Ca is intracellular, and its in the ER or mito
  • cuz cytoplasmic Ca functions in signaling, muscle contraction and NT release.
  • 40% of plasma Ca bound to proteins and thus isn’t filtered
  • 98% of filtered calcium is reabsorbed
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Ca reabsorption in the proximal tubule

A
  • 70% of filtered calcium is reabsorbed in the PT
  • 20% of this via apical Ca channels driven by: 1 Ca concentration gradient and 2 cytoplasmic negative membrane potential
  • 80% via paracellular route: 1 lumenal positive transepi pot. created by Cl- reabs 2 solvent drag
  • Ca then exits via Ca-ATPase and Na/Ca antiporter

(probably just know relative amounts)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Ca reabsorption by the thick ascending limb of the loop of henle

A

-20% of filtered calcium reabsorbed by thick ascending limb of the loop via the same mechanisms as in the PT (but no solvent drag)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Ca reabsorption by the late DT and collecting duct

A
  • 10% of filtered Ca reabsorbed here
  • Again, using apical Ca channels and basolateral Na/Ca antiporter and Ca-ATPase
  • but only transcellular reabsorption in late DT/CD cuz transepithelial potential is lumenal negative here
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Hormonal regulation of Ca excretion: Calcitriol

A

Decreased plasma Ca triggers:

  1. increased calcitriol
  2. increased Ca reabs. in gut
  3. Increased Ca reabsorption by DT
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Hormonal regulation of Ca excretion: PTH

A

Decreased plasma Ca triggers:

  1. increased PTH
  2. Increased bone resorption (osteoclasts)
  3. increased Ca reabs. by loop and DT
17
Q

Hormonal regulation of Ca excretion: Calcitonin

A

Increased plasma Ca triggers:

  1. Increased calcitonin
  2. which causes increased bone formation (osteoblasts)
18
Q

P043- reabsorption in PT

A

-80% of filtered P04 reabs. here
-P04 entry from renal fluid via 2Na/P04 cotransporter
-P04 crosses basolateral membrane via P04/Anion antiporter
(don’t know number)

19
Q

How does hormonal regulation of P04 excretion occur?

A

-occurs through changes in PT reabsoption.

20
Q

Hormonal regulation of P04 homeostasis: Calcitriol

A

decreased plasma P04 triggers:

  1. increased calcitriol
  2. increased P04 abs. in gut
  3. increased P04 reabs. in kidney
21
Q

Hormonal regulation of P04 homeostasis: Calcitonin

A

Increased plasma Ca triggers:

  1. increased calcitonin
  2. Increased P04 incorporation into bone
  3. Decreased P04 reabs. in kidney (increased excretion)
22
Q

Hormonal regulation of P04: PTH

A

Decreased plasma Ca triggers:

  1. Increased PTH
  2. Increased P04 release from bone* BUT
  3. decreased P04 reabs. in Kidney*
    * Effects cancel: PTH has minimal effects on phosphate levels
23
Q

What are two endogenous anions?

A
  1. prostaglandins

2. Uric Acid

24
Q

What are four anionic drugs?

A
  1. penicillin
  2. Salicylate
  3. Ibuprofen
  4. Adefovir (Anti-HIV)
25
Q

What are two endogenous cations?

A
  1. Epinephrine

2. Norepinephrine

26
Q

What are four cationic drugs?

A
  1. morphine
  2. amiloride
  3. verapamil (Ca channel blocker)
  4. Vinblastine (chemotherapeutic)
27
Q

What’s important to remember about secretion of organic cations and anions in the kidney?

A

All organic anions are secreted by the same transporter
Similarly, all organic cations are secreted by the same transporter

*So what? Competition occurs! (This is why drug interactions are so important to consider)

28
Q

Organic Anion Secretion in the PT

A
  • Anions taken up from the blood via anion/alpha keto-glutarate antiporter
  • Alpha ketoglutarate recycled via na coupled cotransporter
  • Anions secreted into RT via Cl-/anion exchanger
29
Q

Organic Cation Secretion in the PT

A
  • Organic cations taken up from the blood via passive transporter
  • cations enter renal fluid via cation/H+ antiporter and MDR-related transporters
30
Q

Properties of MDR-related transporters

A
  • Belongs to the ABC family of transporters (ATP binding cassette)
  • Includes MDR1 responsible for multidrug resistance of cancer cells
31
Q

Why does the kidney need receptor-mediated endocytosis?

A

-Peptides and small proteins small enough to slip through filtration barrier need to be taken back up

32
Q

What is Fanconi’s Syndrome?

A
  • Defect in receptors or V-ATPase in PT cause it

- leads to proteinuria (cuz cant reabs. small proteins that get through filter into Bowman’s space and the renal tubule)