What structures make up the nephron?
Renal tubule
Glomerulus
How many nephrons are in the human kidney?
~1 million
What is Bowman’s capsule?
Blind, dilated end of tubule into which tuft of capillaries invaginates to form the glomerulus
What supplies the glomerulus? Which is the larger of the two?
Afferent and efferent arterioles
Afferent is larger in diameter
What are the two layers of the glomerulus?
Capillary endothelium
Specialised epithelium of capsule
Describe the structure of the glomerular endothelium, including the cell types found
Fenestrated endothelium with pores 70-90nm in diameter
Surrounded by glomerular basement membrane (basal lamina) without visible gaps or pores
Also surrounded by podocytes: specialised cells with pseudopodia which interdigitate to forms filtration slits ~25nm wide along capillary wall
Mesangial cells between the endothelium and basal lamina
What is the mesangium?
Mesangial cells and the extracellular matrix they secrete
List 5 properties of mesangial cells
What is the total area of glomerular capillary endothelium across which filtration occurs in humans?
~0.8m^2
What are the characteristics of substances permitted free passage by the glomerulus?
Neutral charge
Up to 4nm in diameter
What size substances are excluded from glomerular filtration?
> 8nm in diameter
Three distinctive histologic features of the proximal convoluted tubule
Describe the epithelium of the descending limb and thin portion of ascending limb of loop of Henle
Thin, permeable
What is the difference between cortical and juxtomedullary nephrons?
Cortical: glomeruli in outer cortex, short loops of Henle
Juxtamedullary: glomeruli in juxtamedullary region of cortex, long loops of Henle that extend down into medullary pyramids
What % of nephrons in humans are juxtamedullary?
~15%
What three cell types make up the juxtaglomerular apparatus?
Describe the epithelium of the distal convoluted tubule
Lower than the proximal tubule with fewer microvilli
Describe the epithelium of the collecting ducts
Made of two cell types: principal and intercalated
Compare and contrast the structure and function of P and I cells in the collecting ducts
Principal: relatively tall with few organelles, Na+ reabsorption and ADH-stimulated H2O reabsorption
Intercalated: fewer, also present in DCT, more organelles (microvilli, cytoplasmic vesicles and mitochondria) than P cells, responsible for acid secretion and HCO3- transport
What are the RMICs? What are their function?
Renal medullary interstitial cells
Site of COX-2 and PGES expression
Synthesise prostanoids including PGE2 (role in Na+ and H2O homeostasis)
At what two sites in the kidney is PGI2 secreted?
Arterioles
Glomeruli
Describe the renal circulation. What is the difference in circulation between the cortical and jextamedullary nephrons?
What is unique about the glomerular capillaries?
Only capillaries in the body which drain into arterioles
Arteriole segments between glomeruli and tubules are technically a portal system
Describe the structure of the descending and ascending portions of the vasa recta
Descending: non-fenestrated endothelium with facilitated transporter for urea
Ascending: fenestrated endothelium, role in conservation of solutes