loop of henle Flashcards
2 functions of the loop of Henle
- 25% reabsorption of NaCl, H2O, HCO3-, K+
- Concentrates or dilutes urine
Are there more cortical or juxtamedullary nephrons? Which one has the longer loop of Henle?
More cortical nephrons, but juxtamedullary ones have the longer loop.
Characterise the 3 parts of the loop of Henle
-
Thin descending limb:
- No active NaCl transport
- Permeable to water, urea, or solutes (NaCl)
-
Thin ascending limb: diluter
- No active NaCl transport
- Permeable to to urea or solutes (NaCl)
- NOT permeable to water
-
Thick ascending limb: diluter
- NaCl reabsorption!
- NOT permeable to H2O
A & B only
Everything but glucose
What are teh permeability and transport activityof the thin ascending limb? (Select all that apply)
- Impermeable to urea
- Permeable to NaCl
- Little if any active NaCl transport
- Impermeable to H2O
Permeable to NaCl
Little if any active NaCl transport
Impermeable to H2O
What are the permeability adn ransport activity of the thick ascending limb ( selecta all that apply)?
- Totally impermeable to water
- Permeable to solutes
- Active NaCl transport
- Active urea reabsorption
Totally impermeable ot water
Permeable to solutes
Active NaCl transport
Active transport in the thick ascending limb is performed by what transporter?
What drives it?
Na, K, 2Cl-cotransporter brings in the Na+ after the Na,K-ATPase pumped Na+ out of the cell to decrease [Na]intracellular
Furosemide (Lasix)
High-ceiling diuretic that inhibits the apical Na, K, 2Cl-cotransporter
–> large increases in urine flow & natriuresis
What happens to K+ in the thick ascending limb?
- K+ enters the cell both via the Na,K, 2Cl-contransporter and the Na,K-ATPase
- Some of the K+ is secreted back into the tubular fluid via apical membrane K+ channels, generating a lumen-positive transepithelial gradient
What is the driving force for passive Na+ reabsorption along the paracellular pathway in the thick ascending limb?
The recycling of K+ from the cell back into the lumen generates a positive lumen that drives Na+ out paracellularly towards the blood.
This is ~50% of Na+ reabsorption in the thick ascending limb
For every ATP used by the Na,K-ATPase, what happens to Na+?
1 Na+ is sent out transcellularly by the ATPase
Another Na+ is sent out paracellularly because the K+ put inside the cell by the ATPase is secreted into the lumen, where it generates the electrical gradient for the Na+ to leave. (50%)
Why is the thick ascending limb the “diluting segment”?
It reabsorbs NaCl but not water
Corticomedullary interstitial osmotic gradient
As you go down from the cortex into the medulla, the interstitium becomes more concentrated because the ascending limbs are sending NaCl into it
Going down the descending limb, the tube gets more ____
Going up the ascending limb, the tube gets more ___
Going down = concentrated
Going up = diluted