Proximal Tubule Transport Flashcards

1
Q

Normal kidney flitration in L/day:

A

180

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2
Q

Normal renal plasma flow (mL/min) through Afferent arteriole?

A

600 mL/min

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3
Q

Normal GFR in mL/min:

A

125 mL/min

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4
Q

Normal plasma flow in Efferent arteriole?

A

475 mL/min

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5
Q

Proportion of filtered solutes and water reabsorbed in the proximal tubule?

A

2/3

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6
Q

What is secondary active transport?

A

When one solute moves down its electrochemical gradient and drags another solute with it.

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7
Q

Proximal tubule lumen concentration of Na?

A

140 mM

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8
Q

intracellular concentration of Na?

A

4-10 mM

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9
Q

Peritubular capilary conc of Na?

A

140 mM

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10
Q

Explain the basolateral membrane events of Na and K:

A

Na-K-ATPase pumps 3 Na out into the peritubular capillary, and 2 K into the cell. The K recycles by leaving the cell passively through a K channel down its concentration gradient. (See page 4 lecture notes)

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11
Q

Four types of Na transporters on the apical (luminary) side of the cell to bring Na in:

A
  1. Na/H Antiporter
  2. Na/Gluc Symporter (SGLT-1/2)
    - 90% glu reabsorbed in prox tub via SGLT-2
  3. Na/AA Symporter
  4. Na/PO4 Symporter

***Glu, AA, PO4 all being brought in AGAINST their conc gradient

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12
Q

What is Tm with regards to Glucose? When is it reached?

A

Maximum transport of glucose SGLTs. Saturates at 15 mM.

*beyond this, gluc will remain in urine

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13
Q

Why is glucosuria NOT a marker for diabetes?

A

Can have normal serum glucose AND glucose present in urine if proximal tubule is damaged.

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14
Q

How does Cl- get back into the cell in the proximal tubule?

A

Via formate (HCOO-) antiporter

**formate forms formic acid with H+ in the lumen that have been kicked out via Na/H antiporter.

**formic acid comes back into the cell and dissociates thus recycling the formate

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15
Q

How does Cl- get back into the capillary?

A

K/Cl symporter (from cell)

Cl channel (down electrochem gradient)

Paracellularly (once Cl is concentrated in later portion of tubule, conc gradient is created)
-can bring Na with

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16
Q

% of bicarb that gets “reclaimed” in the proximal tubule:

A

80%

17
Q

How is bicarb reclaimed in the cell?

A

Carbonic anhydrase:

CO2 (ubiquitous) + H20 (reabsorbed) –> CA –> HCO3- + H+

18
Q

How does bicarb get from the cell back into the blood?

A

Na/HCO3 symporter

**requires 3 bicarbs for every Na

19
Q

Three ways water get reabsorbed?

A
  1. diffusion
  2. pericellularly – straight to capillary
  3. aquaporins
20
Q

What causes the shift from favoring filtration is the glomerulus to favoring reabsorption in the peritubular capillaries?

A

A small increase in the intracapillary oncotic pressure
-29 mmHg –> 33mmHg

A larger decrease in the hydrostatic pressure
-60 mmHg –> 20 mmHg

**both favor reabsorption leading to net reabsorption force of 10 mmHg

(see page 9 lecture notes)

21
Q

What things don’t have channels or transporters and cannot be reabsorbed because they can’t diffuse across lipid membranes?

A

Polar molecules

Ex: waste products, toxins, drugs, ….. all the stuff we WANT to get rid of
-cyt P450 in liver makes things polar so they get excreted

**this is why we filter 180 L per day!!!

22
Q

What things don’t have channels or transporters but can get back in across lipid membranes?

A

steroid hormones

cholesterol

O2

**lipophilic stuff

23
Q

What are OATs and OCTs?

A

Organic Anion/Cation Transporters

-Actively transport weak organic acids and bases out of blood and into cell for facilitated transport to tubule lumen

24
Q

Which WOAs and WOBs do we want to keep?

A

MCAs (monocarboxylic acids)

-pyruvate, ketones, lactate

25
Q

How do we get MCAs back into the cell from tubular lumen?

A

Na/MCA Symporter

**driven by Na strong conc gradient