Reabsorption and secretion Flashcards
Mechanisms of reabsorption
By carrier mediated transport system eg glucose, amino acids, organic acids, sulphate and phosphate ions - Tm mechanism
Reabsorption of Na+ ions (active transport - sodium pump)
Why does substrate enter the urine?
Carriers have a maximum transport capacity Tm which is due to saturation of the carriers.
If Tm is exceeded, then the excess substrate enters the urine.
What is the Renal threshold?
The plasma concentration at which saturation occurs
At what plasma concentration of glucose will all of it be reabsorbed into the blood?
10 mmoles/l = Renal plasma threshold for glucose.
What happens when the level of plasma glucose exceeds 10 mmoles/L
it appears in the urine
If plasma [glucose] = 15 mmoles/l, 15 will be filtered, 10 reabsorbed and 5 excreted.
True or false: Glucose is freely filtered
True
Whatever the plasma concentration of glucose = what will be filtered = linear relationship.
Freely filtered means glucose is neither protein-bound nor complexed with macromolecules.
What regulates blood glucose?
Insulin and the counter-regulatory hormones responsible for its regulation
What is the appearance of glucose in the urine of diabetic patients caused by?
Failure of insulin, NOT the kidney
What substances do the kidneys regulate by means of the Tm mechanism?
Sulphate and phosphate ions
Any increase above the normal level will be excreted, therefore achieving its plasma regulation.
How is Na+ absorbed?
By active transport (sodium pumps), which establishes a gradient for Na+ across the tubule wall
Majority reabsorbed from the proximal tubule
But how come Na2+ can cross the brush bored of the proximal tubule?
The brush border of the proximal tubule cells has a higher permeability to Na+ ions than most other membranes in the body.
Partly because of the enormous surface area offered by the microvilli and the large number of Na+ ion channels, which facilitate this passive diffusion of Na+.
This reabsorption of Na+ ions is key to the reabsorption of the other components of the filtrate.
What creates osmotic force?
The active transport of Na+ out of the tubule followed by Cl- (moves down gradient) creates an osmotic force, drawing H2O out of the tubules.
This concentrates all the substances left in the tubule creating outgoing concentration gradients.
What does the rate of absorption of non-actively reabsorbed solutes depend on (2)
Amount of H2O removed, which will determine the extent of the concentration gradient.
The permeability of the membrane to any particular solute.
What happens with urea?
Tubule membrane is only moderately permeable to urea, so only about 50% is reabsorbed, the remainder stays in the tubule.
Which substances is the tubular membrane impermeable to?
Insulin
Mannitol - diuretic
Despite a concentration gradient being established favouring their reabsorption, they cannot gain access through the tubule membrane so that all that is filtered stays in the tubule and passes out in the urine.