Kidney All Alevels Topic6 Flashcards

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1
Q

What is Osmoregulation?
Where does it occur?

A

Osmoregulation is the control of the blood water potential.
Occurs in the nephron.

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2
Q

What is the function of the nephron?
Describe the structure of the nephron.

A

The function if the nephron is the create urine, filter the blood to remove waste and selectively reabsorbed useful substances back into the blood.
Nephrons are long tables surrounded by capillaries

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3
Q

What are the stages in Osmoregulation?

A

1.Ultrafiltration
2.Selective Reabsorption.
3.Loop of Henle
4.Reabsorption of water at the DCT and Collecting Duct

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4
Q

What is the function of the loop of Henle?
What are the two limbs and the functions of it and describe structure?

A

Loop of Henle: The Na+ gradient enable Reabsorption of water maintained in medulla by loop of henle.
Ascending Limb:Na+ Activiely transport out. Thicker walls so impermeable to water.
Descending Limb:Walls thinner so permeable to water.

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5
Q

What occurs in the Loop of Henle?
[4STAGES[First 2stages]

A

1.Mitochondria in walls provides energy to Actively transport Na+ out of Ascending limb of Loop of Henle
2.Accumulation of Na+ OUTSIDE Nephron IN medulla lowers water potential.

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6
Q

What are the last two stages in Loop of Henle?

A

3.Due to decrease in water potential(lower water potential)water diffuses out by osmosis into interstitial space and then blood capillaries.
4.At base of Ascending Limb some Na+ transported out by diffusion.

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7
Q

What occurs in the last stage of Osmoregulation?
What is the last stage called in Osmoregulation?
Give the first two stages.

A

The last stage is Reabsorption of water at the DCT and Collecting Duct.
1.Due to all the Na+ actively transported out of PCT, when filtrate reaches top of pct its very dilute.
2.Filtrates moves into Distal Convoluted Tubules and collecting duct.

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8
Q

What is the last thing that occurs in Reabsorption of water at the DCT and Collecting Duct?

A

When filtrate moves into Distal Convoluted Tubulesand collecting duct.
This section of medulla surrounded two parts of the nephron very concentrated.
So even more water diffuses out of DCT and Collecting Duct.
What remains transported to and forms urine.

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9
Q

What are the adaptions present in Selective Reabsorption?

A

Microvilli-Large surface area for Reabsorption.
Lots of Mitochondria-Provide energy for Active Transport.

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10
Q

What the first thing that occurs in selective Reabsorption?

A

1.Concentration of Na+ in PCT decreased as Na+actively transported out of PCT into bloodstream.

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11
Q

What causes Glucose to transported into the blood?
[Last Two stages]
Selective Reabsorption

A

2.Due to concentration gradient Na+ diffuses down gradient from lumen of PCT into cell-lining the PCT so PCT co-transport Na+ in carry glucose with it.
3.Glucose can then diffuse from Cell-Lining PCT into blood stream.

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12
Q

What is the first stage that occurs in Osmoregulation?
How is Glomerulus formed and what does it cause?

A

1.Blood enters through Afferent Arteriole which spilts into lots of smaller Cappilaries which make up the Glomerulus this causes a high hydrostatic pressure.

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13
Q

What is and how is Glomerulus Filtrate formed?

A

Due to the making of Glomerulus causing a high hydrostatic pressure causing water and glucose and amino acids forced out of the capillaries forming Glomerulus Filtrate.

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14
Q

In ultrafiltration what remains in the capillary endothelium?
And where does the blood leave from?

A

Large proteins and blood cells are too big to leave Capillary endothelium so remain in blood.
Bloods leave via Efferant Arteriole

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15
Q

What is Hypertonic and what is the corrective mechanism for hypertonic?

A

Hypertonic is blood with too low water potential so lots of ions.
Corrective Mechanism: More water re-absorbed by osmosis into blood from tubules of nephrons so Means urine more concentrated.

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16
Q

What is Hypotonic and what is the corrective mechanism for Hypotonic?

A

Hypotonic is blood with too high water potential with low ion.
Corrective Mechanism: Less water is re-absorbed by osmosis into the blood from Tubles of Nephrons this mean urine more dilute.

17
Q

What is the function of Osmoreceptors and where are they found?

A

The function of Osmorereceptors is the detect change in water potential of blood and is found in the Hypothalamus.

18
Q

Describe the role of Hypothalamus , osmoreceptors and ADH when you have low water potential in blood.

A

Water potential of blood to low: water leaves osmoreceptors by osmosis and shrivel.
Stimulates Hypothalamus to produce more of the hormone ADH.

19
Q

Describe the role of Hypothalamus , osmoreceptors and ADH when you have high water potential in blood.

A

Water enters osmoreceptos by osmosis.
Stimulates Hypothalamus to produce less ADH.

20
Q

When is lots of ADH produces and when is little ADH produced?

A

Lots of ADH is produced when blood water potential low.
Little ADH produced when blood water potential high.

21
Q

Where does ADH travel to?

A

ADH travels through blood to target organs the kidney.

22
Q

When ADH reached the kidney what does it cause?

A

When ADH reaches kidney it causes an increase in the permeability of walls of the collecting duct and DCT, this means more water leaves the nephron and reabsorbed into blood so urine more concentrated.

23
Q

What are Aquaporins and what does it cause?

A

AquaPorins are protein channels for water to pass through.
More Aquaporins in cell membrane=More water leaves DCT and collecting and reabsorbed into blood.

24
Q

How are Phosphorylase Enzyme activated, and why?

A

Receptors of cell membrane of kidney complementary in shape to ADH.
When ADH binds to receptors activates a phosphorylase enzyme in cells.

25
Q

What does Phosphorylase do?

A

Phosphorylase causes a vesicle containing Aquaporins to fuse with cell-membrane and tube Aquaporins embedded.