2291Cell Biology and Physiology of the Kidney CHAPTER 309
+ –
Ca, Mg
3Na
Loop diuretics
THICK ASCENDING LIMB
C
Ca
H2O H2O
H2O
H2O
H2O
H2O
K
2K
Cl
Na
2Cl
+
+
+
+ +
+
Amiloride
CORTICAL COLLECTING DUCT
Principal cell
Type A
intercalated cell
D
Lumen Interstitium
Spironolactone
Eplerenone
Na
H
H
K
3Na
2K
K Aldosterone
Vasopressin
carbonic
anhydrase
HCO3 Cl
3Na
2K
Lumen Interstitium
3Na
Thiazides
DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
Ca
2K
Cl
Na
Cl
Ca
3Na
E
+ +
Lumen Interstitium
ANP
3Na
INNER MEDULLARY COLLECTING DUCT
K 2K
Urea
Na
Vasopressin
F
K
FIGURE 309-3 (Continued)
transporters such as Na+-glucose and Na+-phosphate cotransporters
present in apical membranes. In addition to the paracellular route,
water reabsorption also occurs through the cellular pathway enabled
by constitutively active water channels (aquaporin-1) present on both
apical and basolateral membranes.
Proximal tubular cells reclaim nearly all filtered bicarbonate by a
mechanism dependent on carbonic anhydrases. Filtered bicarbonate
is first titrated by protons delivered to the lumen mainly by Na+/H+
exchange. The resulting carbonic acid (H2
CO3
) is metabolized by brush
border carbonic anhydrase to water and carbon dioxide. Dissolved
carbon dioxide then diffuses into the cell, where it is enzymatically
hydrated by cytoplasmic carbonic anhydrase to re-form carbonic acid.
Finally, intracellular carbonic acid dissociates into free protons and
bicarbonate anions, and bicarbonate exits the cell through a basolateral
Na+/HCO3
− cotransporter. This process is saturable, which can result in
renal bicarbonate excretion when plasma levels exceed the physiologically normal range (24–26 meq/L). Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors such
as acetazolamide, a class of weak diuretic agents, block proximal tubule
bicarbonate reabsorption and are useful for alkalinizing the urine.
The proximal tubule contributes to acid secretion by two mechanisms involving the titration of the urinary buffers ammonia (NH3
)
and phosphate. Renal NH3
is produced by glutamine metabolism in the
proximal tubule. Subsequent diffusion of NH3
out of the proximal tubular cell enables trapping of H+, which is secreted by Na+/H+ exchange,
in the lumen as ammonium ion (NH4
+). Cellular K+ levels inversely
modulate proximal tubular ammoniagenesis, and in the setting of high
serum K+ from hypoaldosteronism, reduced ammoniagenesis promotes type IV renal tubular acidosis. Filtered hydrogen phosphate ion
(HPO4
2−) is also titrated in the proximal tubule by secreted H+ to form
H2
PO4
−, and this reaction constitutes a major component of the urinary
buffer referred to as titratable acid. Most filtered phosphate ion is reabsorbed by the proximal tubule through a sodium-coupled cotransport
process that is regulated by parathyroid hormone (PTH).
Chloride is poorly reabsorbed throughout the first segment of
the proximal tubule, and a rise in Cl− concentration counterbalances
the removal of bicarbonate anion from tubular fluid. In later proximal tubular segments, cellular Cl− reabsorption is initiated by apical
exchange of cellular formate for higher luminal concentrations of Cl−.
2292 PART 9 Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Tract
TABLE 309-1 Inherited Disorders Affecting Renal Tubular Ion and Solute Transport
DISEASE OR SYNDROME GENE OMIMa
Disorders Involving the Proximal Tubule
Proximal renal tubular acidosis Sodium bicarbonate cotransporter (SLC4A4, 4q21) 604278
Fanconi-Bickel syndrome Glucose transporter, GLUT2 (SLC2A2, 3q26.2) 227810
Isolated renal glycosuria Sodium glucose cotransporter (SLC5A2, 16p11.2) 233100
Cystinuria
Type I Cystine, dibasic and neutral amino acid transporter (SLC3A1, 2p16.3) 220100
Non-type I Amino acid transporter, light subunit (SLC7A9, 19q13.1) 600918
Lysinuric protein intolerance Amino acid transporter (SLC7A7, 4q11.2) 222700
Hartnup disorder Neutral amino acid transporter (SLC6A19, 5p15.33) 34500
Hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with
hypercalcemia
Sodium phosphate cotransporter (SLC34A3, 9q34) 241530
Renal hypouricemia
Type 1 Urate-anion exchanger (SLC22A12, 11q13) 220150
Type 2 Urate transporter, GLUT9 (SLC2A9, 4p16.1) 612076
Dent’s disease Chloride channel, ClC-5 (CLCN5, Xp11.22) 300009
X-linked recessive nephrolithiasis with renal failure Chloride channel, ClC-5 (CLCN5, Xp11.22) 310468
X-linked recessive hypophosphatemic rickets Chloride channel, ClC-5 (CLCN5, Xp11.22) 307800
Disorders Involving the Loop of Henle
Bartter’s syndrome
Type 1 Sodium, potassium chloride cotransporter (SLC12A1, 15q21.1) 241200
Type 2 Potassium channel, ROMK (KCNJ1, 11q24) 601678
Type 3 Chloride channel, ClC-Kb (CLCNKB, 1p36) 602023
with sensorineural deafness Chloride channel accessory subunit, Barttin (BSND, 1p31) 602522
Autosomal dominant hypocalcemia with Bartter-like
syndrome
Calcium-sensing receptor (CASR, 3q13.33) 601199
Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia Calcium-sensing receptor (CASR, 3q13.33) 145980
Primary hypomagnesemia Claudin-16 or paracellin-1 (CLDN16 or PCLN1, 3q27) 248250
Isolated renal magnesium loss Sodium potassium ATPase, γ1
-subunit (ATP1G1, 11q23) 154020
Disorders Involving the Distal Tubule and Collecting Duct
Gitelman syndrome Sodium chloride cotransporter (SLC12A3, 16q13) 263800
Primary hypomagnesemia with secondary hypocalcemia Melastatin-related transient receptor potential cation channel 6 (TRPM6, 9q22) 602014
Pseudoaldosteronism (Liddle’s syndrome) Epithelial sodium channel β and γ subunits (SCNN1B, SCNN1G, 16p12.1) 177200
Recessive pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 Epithelial sodium channel, α, β, and γ subunits (SCNN1A, 12p13; SCNN1B,
SCNN1G, 16pp12.1)
264350
Pseudohypoaldosteronism type 2 (Gordon’s hyperkalemiahypertension syndrome)
Kinases WNK-1, WNK-4 (WNK1, 12p13; WNK4, 17q21.31) 145260
X-linked nephrogenic diabetes insipidus Vasopressin V2 receptor (AVPR2, Xq28) 304800
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (autosomal) Water channel, aquaporin-2 (AQP2, 12q13) 125800
Distal renal tubular acidosis
autosomal dominant Anion exchanger-1 (SLC4A1, 17q21.31) 179800
autosomal recessive Anion exchanger-1 (SLC4A1, 17q21.31) 602722
with neural deafness Proton ATPase, β1 subunit (ATP6V1B1, 2p13.3) 192132
with normal hearing Proton ATPase, 116-kD subunit (ATP6V0A4, 7q34) 602722
a
Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/omim).
Once in the lumen, formate anions are titrated by H+ (provided by
Na+/H+ exchange) to generate neutral formic acid, which can diffuse
passively across the apical membrane back into the cell where it dissociates a proton and is recycled. Basolateral Cl− exit is mediated by a K+/
Cl− cotransporter.
Reabsorption of glucose is nearly complete by the end of the
proximal tubule. Cellular transport of glucose is mediated by apical
Na+-glucose cotransport coupled with basolateral, facilitated diffusion
by a glucose transporter. This process is also saturable, leading to glycosuria when plasma levels exceed 180–200 mg/dL, as seen in untreated
diabetes mellitus. Inhibitors of the Na+-glucose cotransporter SLGT2
in proximal tubules block glucose reabsorption and lower blood glucose, which has therapeutic benefits in diabetes mellitus and chronic
diabetic kidney disease.
The proximal tubule possesses specific transporters capable of secreting a variety of organic acids (carboxylate anions) and bases (mostly
primary amine cations). Organic anions transported by these systems
include several protein-bound drugs not filtered at the glomerulus
(penicillins, cephalosporins, and salicylates). Probenecid inhibits renal
organic anion secretion and was historically used to elevate plasma
concentrations of certain drugs such as penicillin and oseltamivir.
Organic cations secreted by the proximal tubule include various biogenic amine neurotransmitters (dopamine, acetylcholine, epinephrine,
norepinephrine, and histamine) and creatinine. The ATP-dependent
transporter P-glycoprotein is expressed in brush border membranes
and secretes several medically important drugs, including cyclosporine, digoxin, tacrolimus, and various cancer chemotherapeutic
agents. Certain drugs like cimetidine and trimethoprim compete with
2293Cell Biology and Physiology of the Kidney CHAPTER 309
endogenous compounds for transport by the organic cation pathways.
Although these drugs elevate serum creatinine levels, there is no actual
change in GFR in this setting.
Calcium and phosphorus homeostasis depends on normal functioning of the proximal tubule. Approximately 60–70% of filtered calcium
and ~85% of filtered phosphorus (in the form of inorganic phosphate)
are reabsorbed by the proximal tubule. Whereas calcium reabsorption
is mostly by passive diffusion through the paracellular route, phosphate reabsorption is mediated by sodium-coupled cotransport. In
addition to direct reabsorption, the proximal tubule contributes to
systemic mineral balance by participating in specific endocrine pathways. Circulating 25-hydroxy vitamin D (calcidiol) is bioactivated by
proximal tubular 1α-hydroxylase to produce 1,25-di-hydroxy vitamin
D (calcitriol), the most active form of the hormone, which acts on the
small intestine to promote calcium absorption. Phosphate balance
is affected by circulating fibroblast growth hormone 23 (FGF23), a
bone-derived hormone that interacts with its receptor (FGFR1) and
co-receptor (Klotho) on proximal tubular cells to suppress sodiumphosphate cotransport and promote renal phosphate excretion. PTH
stimulates proximal tubular 1α-hydroxylation of vitamin D, whereas
it suppresses sodium-phosphate cotransport. Derangements in PTH
and FGF23 account for abnormal calcium and phosphate balance in
chronic kidney disease.
The proximal tubule, through distinct classes of Na+-dependent and
Na+-independent transport systems, reabsorbs amino acids efficiently.
These transporters are specific for different groups of amino acids. For
example, cystine, lysine, arginine, and ornithine are transported by a
system comprising two proteins encoded by the SLC3A1 and SLC7A9
genes. Mutations in either SLC3A1 or SLC7A9 impair reabsorption
of these amino acids and cause the disease cystinuria. Peptide hormones, such as insulin and growth hormone, β2
-microglobulin, and
other small proteins, are taken up by the proximal tubule through
a process of absorptive endocytosis and are degraded in acidified
endocytic lysosomes. Acidification of these vesicles depends on a vacuolar H+-ATPase and Cl− channel. Impaired acidification of endocytic
vesicles because of mutations in a Cl− channel gene (CLCN5) causes
low-molecular-weight proteinuria in Dent’s disease.
LOOP OF HENLE
The loop of Henle consists of three major segments: descending thin
limb, ascending thin limb, and ascending thick limb. Approximately
15–25% of filtered NaCl is reabsorbed in the loop of Henle, mainly by
the thick ascending limb. The loop of Henle has an important role in
urinary concentration by contributing to the generation of a hypertonic medullary interstitium in a process called countercurrent multiplication. The loop of Henle is the site of action for the most potent class
of diuretic agents (loop diuretics) and also contributes to reabsorption
of calcium and magnesium ions.
The descending thin limb is highly water permeable owing to
dense expression of constitutively active aquaporin-1 water channels.
By contrast, water permeability is negligible in the ascending limb.
In the thick ascending limb, there is a high level of secondary active
NaCl transport enabled by the Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter on the
apical membrane in series with basolateral Cl− channels and Na+/K+-
ATPase (Fig. 309-3C). The Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter is the primary
target for loop diuretics. Tubular fluid K+ is the limiting substrate for
this cotransporter (tubular concentration of K+ is similar to plasma,
~4 meq/L), but transporter activity is maintained by K+ recycling
through an apical potassium channel. The cotransporter also enables
reabsorption of NH4
+ in lieu of K+, and this leads to accumulation of
both NH4
+ and NH3
in the medullary interstitium. An inherited disorder of the thick ascending limb, Bartter’s syndrome, is a salt-wasting
renal disease associated with hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis.
Loss-of-function mutations in one of five distinct genes encoding
components of the Na+/K+/2Cl− cotransporter (NKCC2), apical K+
channel (KCNJ1), basolateral Cl− channel (CLCNKB, BSND), or calciumsensing receptor (CASR) can cause Bartter’s syndrome.
Potassium recycling also contributes to a positive electrostatic
charge in the lumen relative to the interstitium that promotes divalent
cation (Mg2+ and Ca2+) reabsorption through a paracellular pathway.
A Ca2+-sensing, G protein–coupled receptor (CaSR) on basolateral
membranes regulates NaCl reabsorption in the thick ascending limb
through dual signaling mechanisms using either cyclic AMP or
eicosanoids. This receptor enables a steep relationship between plasma
Ca2+ levels and renal Ca2+ excretion. Loss-of-function mutations in
CaSR cause familial hypercalcemic hypocalciuria because of a blunted
response of the thick ascending limb to extracellular Ca2+. Mutations
in CLDN16 encoding paracellin-1, a transmembrane protein located
within the tight junction complex, leads to familial hypomagnesemia
with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis, suggesting that the ion
conductance of the paracellular pathway in the thick limb is regulated.
The loop of Henle contributes to urine-concentrating ability by
establishing a hypertonic medullary interstitium that promotes water
reabsorption by the downstream inner medullary collecting duct.
Countercurrent multiplication produces a hypertonic medullary interstitium using two countercurrent systems: the loop of Henle (opposing
descending and ascending limbs) and the vasa recta (medullary peritubular capillaries enveloping the loop). The countercurrent flow in these
two systems helps maintain the hypertonic environment of the inner
medulla, but NaCl reabsorption by the thick ascending limb is the
primary initiating event. Reabsorption of NaCl without water dilutes
the tubular fluid and adds new osmoles to medullary interstitial fluid.
Because the descending thin limb is highly water permeable, osmotic
equilibrium occurs between the descending limb tubular fluid and the
interstitial space, leading to progressive solute trapping in the inner
medulla. Maximum medullary interstitial osmolality also requires partial recycling of urea from the collecting duct.
DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
The distal convoluted tubule reabsorbs ~5% of the filtered NaCl. This
segment is composed of a tight epithelium with little water permeability. The major NaCl-transporting pathway uses an apical membrane,
electroneutral thiazide-sensitive Na+/Cl− cotransporter in tandem with
basolateral Na+/K+-ATPase and Cl− channels (Fig. 309-3D). Apical
Ca2+-selective channels (TRPV5) and basolateral Na+/Ca2+ exchange
mediate calcium reabsorption in the distal convoluted tubule. Ca2+
reabsorption is inversely related to Na+ reabsorption and is stimulated
by PTH. Blocking apical Na+/Cl− cotransport will reduce intracellular
Na+, favoring increased basolateral Na+/Ca2+ exchange and passive apical Ca2+ entry. Loss-of-function mutations of SLC12A3 encoding the
apical Na+/Cl− cotransporter cause Gitelman syndrome, a salt-wasting
disorder associated with hypokalemic alkalosis and hypocalciuria.
Mutations in TRPM6 encoding Mg2+ permeable ion channels also
cause familial hypomagnesemia with hypocalcemia. A molecular complex of TRPM6 and TRPM7 proteins is critical for Mg2+ reabsorption
in the distal convoluted tubule.
COLLECTING DUCT
The collecting duct modulates the final composition of urine. The
two major divisions, the cortical collecting duct and inner medullary
collecting duct, contribute to reabsorbing ~4–5% of filtered Na+ and
are important for hormonal regulation of salt and water balance. Cells
in both segments of the collecting duct express vasopressin-regulated
water channels (aquaporin-2 on the apical membrane, aquaporin-3
and -4 on the basolateral membrane). The antidiuretic hormone vasopressin binds to the V2 receptor on the basolateral membrane and
triggers an intracellular signaling cascade through G protein–mediated
activation of adenylyl cyclase, which raises intracellular levels of cyclic
AMP. This signaling cascade stimulates the insertion of water channels
into the apical membrane of collecting duct cells to promote water permeability, water reabsorption, and production of concentrated urine.
In the absence of vasopressin, collecting duct cells are water impermeable, and urine remains dilute.
The cortical collecting duct contains high-resistance epithelia with
two cell types. Principal cells are the main water-reabsorbing, Na+-
reabsorbing, and K+-secreting cells, and the site of action of aldosterone, K+-sparing diuretics, and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists
such as spironolactone and eplerenone. The other cells are type A and
2294 PART 9 Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Tract
B intercalated cells. Type A intercalated cells mediate acid secretion
and bicarbonate reabsorption also under the influence of aldosterone. Type B intercalated cells mediate bicarbonate secretion and acid
reabsorption.
Virtually all transport is mediated through the cellular pathway for
both principal cells and intercalated cells. In principal cells, passive
apical Na+ entry occurs through an amiloride-sensitive, epithelial Na+
channel (ENaC) with basolateral exit mediated by the Na+/K+-ATPase
(Fig. 309-3E). This Na+ reabsorptive process is tightly regulated by
aldosterone and is physiologically activated by a variety of proteolytic
enzymes that cleave extracellular domains of ENaC; plasmin in the
tubular fluid of nephrotic patients, for example, activates ENaC, leading to sodium retention. Aldosterone enters the cell across the basolateral membrane, binds to a cytoplasmic mineralocorticoid receptor, and
then translocates into the nucleus, where it modulates gene transcription, which potentiates Na+ reabsorption and K+ secretion. Activating
mutations in ENaC increase Na+ reclamation and produce hypokalemia, hypertension, and metabolic alkalosis (Liddle’s syndrome). The
potassium-sparing diuretics amiloride and triamterene block ENaC,
resulting in lower Na+ reabsorption.
Principal cells secrete K+ through an apical membrane potassium
channel. Several forces govern the secretion of K+. Most importantly,
the high intracellular K+ concentration generated by Na+/K+-ATPase
creates a favorable concentration gradient for K+ secretion into tubular
fluid. With reabsorption of Na+ without an accompanying anion, the
tubular lumen becomes negative relative to the cell interior, creating
a favorable electrical gradient for secretion of potassium. When Na+
reabsorption is blocked, the electrical component of the driving force
for K+ secretion is blunted, and this explains lack of excess urinary
K+ loss during treatment with potassium-sparing diuretics or mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists. K+ secretion is also promoted
by aldosterone actions that potentiate regional Na+ transport, which
favor more lumen electronegativity, and by increasing the number
and activity of potassium channels. Fast tubular fluid flow rates that
occur during volume expansion or diuretics acting “upstream” of the
cortical collecting duct also promote K+ secretion, as does the presence of relatively nonreabsorbable anions (including bicarbonate and
semisynthetic penicillins) that contribute to the lumen-negative potential. Off-target effects of certain antibiotics, such as trimethoprim and
pentamidine, block ENaCs and predispose to hyperkalemia, especially
when renal K+ handling is impaired for other reasons. Principal cells,
as described below, also participate in water reabsorption in response
to vasopressin.
Intercalated cells do not participate in Na+ reabsorption but instead
mediate acid-base balance. These cells perform two types of transport:
active H+ transport mediated by H+-ATPase (proton pump) and Cl−/
HCO3
− exchange. Intercalated cells arrange the two transport mechanisms on opposite membranes to enable either acid or base secretion.
Type A intercalated cells have an apical proton pump that mediates
acid secretion and a basolateral Cl−/HCO3
− anion exchanger for bicarbonate reabsorption (Fig. 309-3E). Aldosterone increases the number
of H+-ATPase pumps, sometimes contributing to the development of
metabolic alkalosis. Secreted H+ is buffered by NH3
that has diffused
into the collecting duct lumen from the surrounding interstitium. By
contrast, type B intercalated cells have the Cl−/HCO3
− exchanger on the
apical membrane to mediate bicarbonate secretion while the proton
pump resides on the basolateral membrane to enable H+ reabsorption.
Under conditions of acidemia, the kidney preferentially uses type A
intercalated cells to secrete the excess H+ and generate more HCO3
−.
The opposite is true in states of bicarbonate excess with alkalemia
where the type B intercalated cells predominate. An extracellular protein called hensin mediates this adaptation.
Inner medullary collecting duct cells share many similarities with
principal cells of the cortical collecting duct. They have apical Na+
and K+ channels that mediate Na+ reabsorption and K+ secretion,
respectively (Fig. 309-3F). Sodium reabsorption by inner medullary
collecting duct cells is also inhibited by the natriuretic peptides called
atrial natriuretic peptide or renal natriuretic peptide (urodilatin); the
same gene encodes both peptides but uses different posttranslational
processing of a common preprohormone to generate different proteins.
Atrial natriuretic peptides are secreted by atrial myocytes in response
to volume expansion, whereas urodilatin is secreted by renal tubular
epithelia. Natriuretic peptides interact with either apical (urodilatin)
or basolateral (atrial natriuretic peptides) receptors on inner medullary collecting duct cells to stimulate guanylyl cyclase and raise levels
of cytoplasmic cGMP. This effect in turn reduces the activity of the
apical Na+ channel in these cells and attenuates net Na+ reabsorption,
producing natriuresis.
The inner medullary collecting duct transports urea out of the
lumen, returning urea to the interstitium, where it contributes to the
hypertonicity of the medullary interstitium. Urea is recycled by diffusing from the interstitium into the descending and ascending limbs of
the loop of Henle.
HORMONAL REGULATION OF SODIUM
AND WATER BALANCE
The balance of solute and water in the body is determined by the
amounts ingested, distributed to various fluid compartments, and
excreted by skin, bowel, and kidneys. Tonicity, the osmolar state determining the volume behavior of cells in a solution, is regulated by water
balance (Fig. 309-4A), and extracellular blood volume is regulated by
Na+ balance (Fig. 309-4B). The kidney is a critical modulator of both
physiologic processes.
■ WATER BALANCE
Tonicity depends on the variable concentration of effective osmoles
inside and outside the cell causing water to move in either direction
across its membrane. Classic effective osmoles, like Na+, K+, and
their anions, are solutes trapped on either side of a cell membrane,
where they collectively partition and obligate water to move and
find equilibrium in proportion to retained solute. Normal tonicity
(~280 mosmol/L) is rigorously defended by osmoregulatory mechanisms that control water balance to protect tissues from inadvertent
dehydration (cell shrinkage) or water intoxication (cell swelling), both
of which impair cell function (Fig. 309-4A).
The mechanisms that control osmoregulation are distinct from
those governing extracellular volume, although there is some shared
physiology in both processes. While cellular concentrations of K+ have
a determinant role in any level of tonicity, the routine surrogate marker
for assessing clinical tonicity is the concentration of serum Na+. Any
reduction in total body water, which raises the Na+ concentration,
triggers a brisk sense of thirst and conservation of water by decreasing renal water excretion mediated by release of vasopressin from
the posterior pituitary. Conversely, a lower plasma Na+ concentration
triggers more renal water excretion by suppressing the secretion of
vasopressin. Whereas all cells expressing mechanosensitive TRPV1, 2,
or 4 channels, among potentially other sensors, respond to changes in
tonicity by altering their volume and Ca2+ concentration, only TRPV+
neuronal cells connected to the organum vasculosum of the lamina
terminalis are osmoreceptive. Only these cells, because of their neural
connectivity and adjacency to a minimal blood-brain barrier, modulate the downstream release of vasopressin by the posterior lobe of the
pituitary gland. Secretion is stimulated primarily by changing tonicity
and secondarily by other nonosmotic signals such as variable blood
volume, stress, pain, nausea, and some drugs. The release of vasopressin by the posterior pituitary increases linearly as plasma tonicity
rises above normal, although this varies, depending on the perception
of extracellular volume (one form of cross-talk between mechanisms
that regulate blood volume and osmolality). Changing the intake or
excretion of water provides a means for adjusting plasma tonicity; thus,
osmoregulation governs water balance.
The kidneys contribute to maintaining water balance through the
regulation of renal water excretion. The ability to concentrate urine
to an osmolality exceeding that of plasma enables water conservation,
whereas the ability to produce urine more dilute than plasma promotes
excretion of excess water. For water to enter or exit a cell, the cell membrane must express aquaporins. In the kidney, aquaporin-1 is constitutively active in all water-permeable segments (e.g., proximal tubule,
2295Cell Biology and Physiology of the Kidney CHAPTER 309
descending thin limb of the loop of Henle), whereas aquaporin-2, -3,
and -4 in the collecting duct promote vasopressin-regulated water permeability. Net water reabsorption is ultimately driven by the osmotic
gradient between dilute tubular fluid and a hypertonic medullary
interstitium.
■ SODIUM BALANCE
The perception of extracellular blood volume is determined, in part,
by the integration of arterial tone, cardiac stroke volume, heart rate, and
the water and solute content of extracellular fluid. Na+ and accompanying anions are the most abundant extracellular effective osmoles and
together support a blood volume around which pressure is generated.
Under normal conditions, this volume is regulated by sodium balance
(Fig. 309-4B), and the balance between daily Na+ intake and excretion
is under the influence of baroreceptors in regional blood vessels and
vascular hormone sensors modulated by atrial natriuretic peptides,
the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, Ca2+ signaling, adenosine,
vasopressin, and the neural adrenergic axis. If Na+ intake exceeds Na+
excretion (positive Na+ balance), then a rising blood volume will trigger a proportional increase in urinary Na+ excretion. Conversely, when
Na+ intake is less than urinary excretion (negative Na+ balance), blood
volume will fall and trigger enhanced renal Na+ reabsorption, leading
to decreased urinary Na+ excretion.
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system is the best-understood
hormonal system modulating renal Na+ excretion. Renin is synthesized
and secreted by granular cells in the wall of the afferent arteriole. Its
secretion is controlled by several factors, including β1
-adrenergic stimulation to the afferent arteriole, input from the macula densa, and prostaglandins. Renin and ACE activity eventually produce angiotensin II
that directly and indirectly promotes renal Na+ and water reabsorption.
Stimulation of proximal tubular Na+/H+ exchange by angiotensin II
directly increases Na+ reabsorption. Angiotensin II also promotes
Na+ reabsorption along the collecting duct by stimulating aldosterone
secretion by the adrenal cortex. Constriction of the efferent glomerular
arteriole by angiotensin II indirectly boosts the filtration fraction and
raises peritubular capillary oncotic pressure to promote tubular Na+
reabsorption. Finally, angiotensin II inhibits renin secretion through
a negative feedback loop. Alternative metabolism of angiotensin by
ACE2 generates the vasodilatory peptide angiotensin 1-7 that acts
through Mas receptors to counterbalance several actions of angiotensin
II on blood pressure and renal function (Fig. 309-2C).
Aldosterone is synthesized and secreted by granulosa cells in the
adrenal cortex. It binds to cytoplasmic mineralocorticoid receptors
in the collecting duct principal cells and boosts the activity of ENaC,
apical membrane K+ channel, and basolateral Na+/K+-ATPase. These
effects are mediated in part by aldosterone-stimulated transcription
of the gene encoding serum/glucocorticoid-induced kinase 1 (SGK1).
The activity of ENaC is increased by SGK1-mediated phosphorylation
of Nedd4-2, a protein that promotes recycling of the Na+ channel from
the plasma membrane. Phosphorylated Nedd4-2 has impaired interactions with ENaC, leading to higher channel density at the plasma membrane and greater capacity for Na+ reabsorption by the collecting duct.
Cell volume
pNa+ = Tonicity = = Effective osmoles
TB H2O
TB Na+ + TB K+
TB H2O
Net water balance
+ TB H2O
– TB H2O
Thirst
Osmoreception
Custom/habit
ADH levels
V2-receptor/AP2 water flow
Medullary gradient
Water intake Determinants
Renal regulation
Free water clearance
Hyponatremia
Hypotonicity
Water intoxication
Hypernatremia
Hypertonicity
Dehydration
Cell
membrane
Clinical result
A
Extracellular blood volume and pressure
(TB Na+ + TB H2O + Vascular tone + Heart rate + Stroke volume) Net Na+ balance
+ TB Na+
– TB Na+
Taste
Baroreception
Custom/habit
Na+ reabsorption
Tubuloglomerular feedback
Macula densa
Atrial natriuretic peptides
Na Determinants + intake
Renal regulation
Fractional Na+ excretion
Edema
Volume depletion
Clinical result
B
FIGURE 309-4 Determinants of sodium and water balance. A. Plasma Na+
concentration is a surrogate marker for plasma tonicity. Tonicity is determined by the number of
effective osmoles in the body divided by the total body H2
O (TB H2
O), which translates simply into the total body Na (TB Na+
) and anions outside the cell separated from the
total body K (TB K+
) inside the cell by the cell membrane. Net water balance is determined by the integrated functions of thirst, osmoreception, Na reabsorption, vasopressin
release, and the strength of the medullary gradient in the kidney, keeping tonicity within a narrow range of osmolality (~280 mosmol/L). When water metabolism is disturbed
and total body water increases, hyponatremia, hypotonicity, and water intoxication occur; when total body water decreases, hypernatremia, hypertonicity, and dehydration
occur. B. Extracellular blood volume and pressure are an integrated function of total body Na+
(TB Na+
), total body H2
O (TB H2
O), vascular tone, heart rate, and stroke
volume that modulates volume and pressure in the vascular tree of the body. This extracellular blood volume is determined by net Na balance under the control of taste,
baroreception, habit, Na+
reabsorption, macula densa/tubuloglomerular feedback, and natriuretic peptides. When Na+
metabolism is disturbed and total body Na+
increases,
edema occurs; when total body Na+
is decreased, volume depletion occurs. ADH, antidiuretic hormone; AQP2, aquaporin-2.
2296 PART 9 Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Tract
Chronic exposure to aldosterone is associated with lower urinary
Na+ excretion lasting only a few days, after which Na+ excretion returns
to previous levels. This phenomenon, called aldosterone escape, is
explained by lower proximal tubular Na+ reabsorption following blood
volume expansion. Excess Na+ that is not reabsorbed by the proximal
tubule overwhelms the reabsorptive capacity of more distal nephron
segments. This escape may be facilitated by atrial natriuretic peptides
that lose their effectiveness in the clinical settings of heart failure,
nephrotic syndrome, and cirrhosis, leading to severe Na+ retention and
volume overload.
■ FURTHER READING
Cherney DZ et al: Sodium glucose cotransporter-2 inhibition and
cardiorenal protection. J Am Coll Cardiol 74:2511, 2019.
Palmer BF, Clegg DJ: Physiology and pathophysiology of potassium
homeostasis. Am J Kid Dis 74:682, 2019.
Romero CA, Carretero OA: Tubule-vascular feedback in renal
autoregulation. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 316:F1218, 2019.
Su W et al: Aquaporins in the kidney: Physiology and pathophysiology.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 318:F193, 2020.
van der Wiljst J et al: Learning physiology from inherited kidney
disorders. Physiol Rev 99:1575, 2019.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is defined by the impairment of kidney
filtration and excretory function over days to weeks (generally known
or expected to have occurred within 7 days), resulting in the retention of nitrogenous and other waste products normally cleared by
the kidneys. AKI is not a single disease but rather a designation for
a heterogeneous group of conditions that share common diagnostic
features: specifically, an increase in serum creatinine (SCr) concentration often associated with a reduction in urine volume. It is important
to recognize that AKI is a clinical diagnosis and not a structural one.
A patient may have AKI with or without injury to the kidney parenchyma. AKI can range in severity from asymptomatic and transient
changes in laboratory parameters of glomerular filtration rate (GFR),
to overwhelming and rapidly fatal derangements in the ability of the
kidney to maintain effective circulating volume regulation, excrete
nitrogenous wastes and metabolic toxins, and maintain electrolyte and
acid-base composition of the plasma.
EPIDEMIOLOGY
AKI complicates 5–7% of acute-care hospital admissions and up to 30%
of admissions to the intensive care unit (ICU). AKI severity is staged
based on the magnitude of the rise in SCr and severity and duration
of oliguria (Table 310-1). The incidence of AKI has grown by more
than fourfold in the United States since 1988 and is estimated to have a
yearly incidence of 500 per 100,000 population, higher than the yearly
incidence of stroke. Large studies have shown that increases in SCr as
low as 0.3 mg/dL in hospitalized patients are independently associated
with an approximately fourfold increase in hospital mortality, with
higher changes in creatine, and longer duration of elevation associated
with greater increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Morbidity of
AKI in those admitted to the ICU exceeds 50% in many studies. AKI
also has longer term implications even if the patient survives the hospitalization. AKI increases the risk for the development or worsening of
chronic kidney disease (CKD) and development of dialysis-requiring
end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). AKI may also occur in the community. Common causes of community-acquired AKI include volume
depletion, heart failure, adverse effects of medications, obstruction of
310 Acute Kidney Injury
Sushrut S. Waikar, Joseph V. Bonventre
TABLE 310-1 Staging of Acute Kidney Injury Severity
STAGE SERUM CREATININE URINE OUTPUT
1 1.5–1.9 times baseline
OR
≥0.3 mg/dL (≥26.5 μmol/L) increase
<0.5 mL/kg per h for 6–12 h
2 2.0–2.9 times baseline <0.5 mL/kg per h for ≥12 h
3 3.0 times baseline
OR
increase in serum creatinine to
≥4.0 mg/dL (≥353.6 μmol/L)
OR
initiation of renal replacement
therapy OR, in patients <18 years of
age, decrease in eGFR to <35 mL/min
per 1.73 m2
<0.3 mL/kg per h for ≥24 h OR
Anuria for ≥12 h
the urinary tract, or malignancy. The most common clinical settings
for hospital-acquired AKI are sepsis, major surgical procedures, critical illness involving heart or liver failure, and nephrotoxic medication
administration.
■ AKI IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD
AKI is also a major medical complication in the developing world,
where the epidemiology differs from that in developed countries
due to differences in demographics, economics, environmental factors, and comorbid disease burden. While certain features of AKI
are common in developed and developing countries—particularly
because urban centers of some developing countries increasingly
resemble those in the developed world—many etiologies for AKI are
region-specific, such as envenomations from snakes, spiders, caterpillars, and bees; infectious causes such as malaria and leptospirosis;
and crush injuries and resultant rhabdomyolysis from earthquakes.
In developing countries, resources to diagnose and manage AKI are
often limited.
ETIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The causes of AKI have traditionally been divided into three broad
categories: prerenal azotemia, intrinsic renal parenchymal disease, and
postrenal obstruction (Fig. 310-1).
■ PRERENAL AZOTEMIA
Prerenal azotemia (from “azo,” meaning nitrogen, and “-emia,” meaning in the blood) is the most common form of AKI. It is the designation
for a rise in SCr or BUN concentration due to inadequate renal plasma
flow and intraglomerular hydrostatic pressure to support normal glomerular filtration. The most common clinical conditions associated
with prerenal azotemia are hypovolemia, decreased cardiac output, and
medications that interfere with renal autoregulatory vascular responses
such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and inhibitors
of angiotensin II (Fig. 310-2). By definition, prerenal azotemia involves
no parenchymal damage to the kidney and is rapidly reversible once
parenchymal blood flow and intraglomerular hemodynamics are
restored. In many cases, however, prerenal azotemia may coexist with
other forms of intrinsic AKI associated with processes acting directly
on the renal parenchyma. Prolonged periods of prerenal azotemia may
lead to ischemic injury to the tubular cells with necrosis, hence termed
acute tubular necrosis (ATN).
Normal GFR is maintained in part by renal blood flow and the relative resistances of the afferent and efferent renal arterioles, which determine the glomerular plasma flow rate and the transcapillary hydraulic
pressure gradient that drive glomerular ultrafiltration. Mild degrees
of hypovolemia and reductions in cardiac output elicit compensatory
renal physiologic changes. Because renal blood flow accounts for 20%
of the cardiac output, renal vasoconstriction and salt and water reabsorption occur as homeostatic responses to decreased effective circulating volume or cardiac output in order to maintain blood pressure
and increase intravascular volume to sustain perfusion to the cerebral
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