First published online February 4, 2005
Journal of Experimental Biology 208, 587-594 (2005)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2005
doi: 10.1242/jeb.01456
Challenges and intriguing problems in comparative renal physiology
William H. Dantzler
Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona,
Tucson, AZ 85724-5051, USA
e-mail:
dantzler{at}u.arizona.edu
Accepted 14 December 2004
The comparative approach has proved important many times in understanding
renal function and continues to offer possible approaches to unsolved problems
today, in three general areas.
- Quantification of glomerular ultrafiltration. In contrast to the complex
capillary network in the mammalian glomerulus, the glomerulus of the
superficial loopless (reptilian-type) avian nephrons consists of a single
capillary loop. This structure, in an avian species where it can be approached
directly, should for the first time permit accurate determinations of the
pressure profiles and the capillary area involved in glomerular
ultrafiltration in an animal with high arterial pressure.
- Fluid reabsorption by proximal renal tubules. In some reptilian proximal
renal tubules, isolated and perfused in vitro, isosmotic fluid
reabsorption can occur at control rates when lithium replaces sodium or when
some other substance replaces sodium or chloride or both in the perfusate and
bathing medium simultaneously. Reabsorption at the control rates, regardless
of the composition of the perfusate and bathing medium, can be at least
partially inhibited by cold and cyanide, but not by blockers of
Na+-K+-ATPase. It is also independent of the buffer
system used, but it is reduced about 20% by removal of colloid from the
peritubular fluid. During the substitutions, the surface area of the proximal
tubule cells increases dramatically and might permit some insignificant force
to be more effective in the reabsorptive process. Understanding the process
involved in this, apparently unique coupling of solute and fluid transport,
certainly would be very valuable in understanding coupled transport of solutes
and water across epithelia in general.
- Urate secretion by proximal renal tubules. Urate is the major
excretory end product of nitrogen metabolism in birds, most reptiles, and a
few amphibians. It undergoes net secretion by the renal tubules. It has been
possible to learn much about the physiology of net secretion in reptiles and
birds and this process appears to be similar to the much less significant
secretory flux in some mammals. However, nothing is known about the molecular
basis of the transport system and understanding these processes may provide
important information for mammals as well as reptiles and birds. These are
some examples of intriguing possibilities for comparative studies of renal
physiology.
Key words: glomerular ultrafiltration, epithelial fluid transport, urate transport, avian kidney, reptilian kidney
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P. L. Dudas, R. M. Pelis, E. J. Braun, and J. L. Renfro
Transepithelial urate transport by avian renal proximal tubule epithelium in primary culture
J. Exp. Biol.,
November 15, 2005;
208(22):
4305 - 4315.
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