Artigo Revisado por pares

THE RETURN OF GLOMERULAR FILTERED ALBUMIN TO THE RAT RENAL VEIN – THE ALBUMIN RETRIEVAL PATHWAY

2001; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 23; Issue: 3-4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1081/jdi-100104719

ISSN

1525-6049

Autores

Gabriela A. Eppel, Tanya M. Osicka, Lynette M. Pratt, Paula Jablonski, Brian O. Howden, Eric Glasgow, Wayne D. Comper,

Tópico(s)

Renal Diseases and Glomerulopathies

Resumo

Recent studies have demonstrated that the normal glomerular capillary wall (GCW) is not charge selective to albumin. This means that albumin flux across the GCW is high. This has been confirmed in studies where albumin uptake by the tubules has been inhibited. Therefore, there must be a high capacity postglomerular retrieval pathway in normal kidneys that returns filtered albumin back to the blood supply.This study identifies the presence of glomerular filtered albumin in the renal vein from the analysis of the decrease of radioactivity in the venous effluent after the injection of a pulse of tritium labeled albumin into the renal artery in vivo and in the isolated perfused kidney (IPK).The glomerular filtered albumin is returned to the blood supply by a high capacity pathway that transports this albumin at a rate of 1830+/-292 microg/min rat kidney (n= 14) (mean+/-SEM). This pathway has been identified under physiological conditions in vivo and in the IPK. The pathway is specific for albumin as it does not occur for horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The pathway is inhibited in a non-filtering kidney. The pathway is also inhibited by NH4Cl, an inhibitor of protein uptake.The high capacity retrieval pathway for albumin is most likely associated with transtubular cell transport. It is also apparent that most albuminuric states could be accounted for by the malfunctioning of this pathway without resorting to any change in glomerular permselectivity.

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