Chapter 44: Osmoregulation and Excretion Flashcards
Key steps of excretory system
- Filtration
- Reabsortion
- Secretion
- Excretion
Renal structures
- Renal cortex- houses the glomerulus and convoluted tubules
- Renal medulla- houses the medullary collecting ducts, loops of Henle, and vasa recta
- Renal artery- blood towards the kidney and supplies the adrenal gland
- Renal vein- carries blood away from the kidney to the inferior vena cava
- Ureter
- Renal pelvis- area at the center of the kidney where urine collects as it is funneled to the ureter
Nephron types
Cortical nephrons- comprise the majoroity of nephrons; only reach a short way into the medulla
Juxtamedullary nephrons- extend deep into the medulla; essential for the production of hyperosmotic urine
Nephron structures
Renal flow path
Blood
- Branch of renal artery
- Afferent arteriole- supplies the glomerulus
- Glomerulus- ball of capillaries
- Efferent arteriole- Capillaries that converge after leaving the glomerulus
- Peritubular capillaries- supply the proximal and distal convoluted tubules
- Vasa recta- branch off the efferent arteriole that supply the medulla and the loop of Henle
- Branch of renal vein
Filtrate
- Bowman’s capsule- cup-shaped swelling that surrounds the glomerulus
- Proximal convoluted tubulue- collects filtrate from Bowman’s capsule
- Loop of Henle- major site for the recovery of water
- Distal convoluted tubule- receives filtrate from the loop of Henle
- Collecting duct
Proximal Tubule
Recaptures ions, water, glucose, amino acids, K+ ions, and other essential nutrients
Molecules are transported actively and passively from the filtrate into the interstitial fluid and then capillaries
- Na+ ions are transported actively
- This drives the passive transport of Cl−
Maintains blood pH by secreting H+ and reabsorbing about 90% of HCO3−
Descending limb of the loop of Henle
Reabsorption of water continues through channels formed by aquaporins
However, almost no channels for salts cause filtrate to become increasingly concentrated
Movement is driven by the high osmolarity of the interstitial fluid in the medulla 1,200mOsm/L
Ascending limb of the loop of Henle
Transport epithelia lack aquaporins
Has two specialized regions:
- Thin segment- NaCl that has become highly concentrated passively diffuses back out of the filtrate
- Thick segment- Transport epithelia actively transport NaCl causing the filtrate to become more dilute
Distal Tubule
Regulates K+ & NaCl concentrations of body fluids
Controlled secretion of H+ and reabsortion of HCO3− contributes to pH regulation
Collecting duct
Carries filtrate through the medulla to the renal pelvis
Hormonal control of permeability and aquaporin insertion determines the extent to which the urine is concentrated
- Conserving water- transport epithelia remain impermeable to salt and water is further removed from filtrate
- Dilute urine- collecting duct actively absorbs salts and does not have aquaporins inserted to prevent water reabsortion
Osmolarity gradients
Proximal tubule- filtrate volume decreases as water and salt are reabsorbed; osmolarity remains the same
Descending loop- solutes become more concentrated due to water leaving the tubule by osmosis
Ascending loop- maintains a high osmolarity in the interstitial fluid of the renal medulla; dilutes the filtrate
The countercurrent multiplier system involving the loop of Henle maintains a high salt concentration in the kidney
- Allows the vasa recta to supply the kidney with nutrients, without interfering with the osmolarity gradient
Antidiuretic hormone
Osmoreceptor cells in the hypothalamus monitor blood osmolarity and regulate release of ADH from the posterior pituitary
Binding of ADH to receptor molecules leads to a temporary increase in the number of aquaporin proteins in the membrane of collecting duct cells to recapture more water
Normal blood osmolarity is 275−295 mOsm/L
As osmolarity falls a negative feedback mechanism reduces the osmoreceptor cell activity in the hypothalmus and ADH secretion is reduced
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
The RAAS responds to a drop in blood volume and pressure by increasing water and Na+ reabsortion
The juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) senses a drop in blood pressure in the afferent arteriole and releases the enzyme renin
Renin initiates a sequence of steps that cleave angiotensinogen to yield angiontensin II
Angiotensin II acts as a hormone and triggers vasoconstriction− increasing blood pressure and decreasing renal blood flow
Angiotensin II also stimulates the release of the mineralcorticoid aldosterone by the adrenal glands which caused the distal tubes and collecting ducts to reabsorb more Na+ and water
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)
Atrial natriuretic peptide is released by myocardial cells in the walls of the atria in response to an increase in blood pressure and volume
ANP opposes the RAAS and inhibits the release of renin from the JGA, inhibits NaCl reabsortion in the collecting ducts, and reduces aldosterone release from the adrenal glands