Week 2: Renal mechanisms of acid excretion Flashcards

1
Q

What are two functions of tubule acid secretion?

A
  • reabsorb filtered HCO3- back to the blood and prevent urinary buffer loss
  • form new HCO3- which is transported into blood to alkalinize the body fluids, to replace HCO3- lost in compensation for metabolic acidosis
  • limited by transporters that stop working when tubular lumen falls below pH 4.4 (steep uphill gradient) (NHE and H-ATPase.
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2
Q

Review bicarbonate reabsorption in PT/TALH and intercalated cells.

A
  1. PT and TALH
    - CA in luminal membranes and inside cell
    - bicarb absorbed as CO2 and H2O and converted back to bicarb in cell. Acid secreted by H-ATPase and NHE. Bicarb secreted by Na/3HCO3- cotransporter and HCO3-/Cl- anti-port on basolateral membrane
  2. Intercalated cells
    - CA inside the cell only, slow formation of water and CO2 from bicarb to enter cell
    - acid secreted from K/H+ anti-port and H-ATPase
    - bicarb exits cell through HCO3-/Cl anti-port
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3
Q

What are ways new HCO3- is formed in the kidneys?

A
  1. Titratable acid
    - HCO3- made from water and CO2 inside cell via Carbonic Anhydrase. The CO2 inside the cell is not from filtered HCO3-
    - filtered buffers in the tubular fluid can trap the secreted H+ and buffer fall in lumen pH (phosphates, sulfates, urate).
    - amount of bicarb formed by this route defined by amount of H+ that can be trapped before pH falls to 4.0 ( H+ made from formation of new bicarb)
  2. Ammoniagenesis
    - glutamine transported into PT cell metabolized by glutaminase to NH4+ and a-ketoglutarate, which is converted to glucose. 2 HCO3- formed in the process for each a-ketoglutarate.
    - acidosis increases glutaminase activity by increasing gene expression and mRNA stability
    - new HCO3- formed without secreting H+
    - NH4+ is secreted into the tubule lumen via NHE mediated Na/NH4 exchange, K channels, and as NH3
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4
Q

Describe handling of NH4+ in the nephron?

A
  • important because it needs to be excreted for new HCO3- to have an impact. Otherwise 2NH4+–>urea +2H+ with H+ combining with HCO3- in the blood
  • NH4+ is reabsorbed in the TALH into ISF by NKCC
  • NH4+ can be secreted from ISF into lumen of collecting duct by NH4+ transporter
  • Na/K ATPase is major mechanism of NH4+ uptake from ISF to cell on basolateral membrane
  • NH3 can diffuse from ISF to CD lumen but must be trapped to remain there. Trapped by H+ secreted by CD intercalated cells via H-ATPase and H/K-ATPase
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5
Q

How do the kidneys respond to metabolic alkalosis?

A

-intercalated ells in CD, beta cells, that have H-ATPase flipped to basolateral side cell, secrets H+ into ISF
-has Cl/HCO3- pedrin exchanger, secrets HCO3- into lumen
goal is to produce alkaline urin which will acidify the body fluids

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6
Q

How do ECF pH and potassium status influence tubular acid secretion?

A
  1. ECF pH
    - drop in pH (H+ increase) will increase driving force for H+ secretion
  2. Potassium status: fixed negative charges on cell proteins are balanced by cell K+ and H+. So H+ and K+ have reciprocal relationship
    - Hyperkalemia: increased K+ ICF will lead to decreased H+ ICF. Decreased H+ secretion and bicarb reabsorption–> metabolic acidosis
    - Hypokalemia: leads to decreased K+ and increased H+ in cell. Increased H+ secretion and HCO3- reabsorption in kidney–>metabolic alkalosis
  3. GFR
    - increased GFR–>increased H+secretion and increased NaHCO3 reabsorption
  4. Decreased ECF volume
    - leads to contraction alkalosis
    - Increased AngII–>increased Na/H transport in PT–>increased H+ secretion and HCO3- reabsorption
    - increased aldosterone–>increased Na+ reabsorption, increased H+ secretion and K+ secretion in collecting ducts
  5. PCO2
    - increased CO2 (e.g. respiratory acidosis) increased H+ secretion and HCO3- reabsorption
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