Function of the proximal tubule (2023)

This chapter seems relevant to the aimsof Section H3(i) from the2017CICM Primary Syllabus,whichexpects theexam candidate to"describe ... tubular function". It only exists because, following from the chapter on glomerular filtration, it seemed reasonable to moveon to the proximal tubule, as a part a logical sequence of works which could now probablybe loosely characterised as Alices' Adventures Through the Uriniferous Tubules. This chapteris somewhat superfluous from an exam perspective, as the CICM examiners don't seem to care what happens in the proximal tubule, and so these tidbits of information are offered here in the same "make of it what you will" spirit as the rest of Deranged Physiology.

Of all the irrelevant tidbits, the most valuable bits of tid are as follows:

  • Structurally, the proximal tubule is:
    • 14mm long, with a lumen 20-30 μm in diameter
    • Lined with simple cuboidal epithelium
    • Tight junctions between cells
    • Massively increasedsurface area:
      • Apically, a microviloous brush border
      • Basolaterally, interdigitated basolateral cell processes
  • The proximal convoluted tubule is the main site of solute and water absorption.
    • 60-70% of glomerular ultrafiltrate is reabsorbed here
    • Sodium gradient drives most of the reabsorption
      • Basolateral Na+/K+ ATPase activity maintains this gradient
    • Sodium co-transporters mediate:
      • Glucose reabsorption
      • Organic anion reabsorption
      • H+ excretion, and therefore bicarbonate reabsorption
      • Phosphate reabsorption
      • Ammonia elimination
    • Water diffuses passively along with sodium
    • Thus, proximal tubule fluid remains isosomolar with glomerular filtrate
  • The proximalstraighttubule is the main site of active organic ion excretion
    • Mediated by the organic anion transport (OAT) protein family
    • Responsible for clearance of numerous physiologically and pharmacologically important solutes, such as:
      • Urate
      • Creatinine
      • Frusemide
      • Metformin
      • Beta-lactam antibiotics
  • Drug targets in the proximal tubule include:
    • Carbonic anhydrase (blocked by acetazolamide - with resulting diuresis and metabolic acidosis)
    • OAT-1 (inihibited by probenecid - thus, decreased excretion of organic anions, including beta-lactam antibiotics)

In terms of reading about this part of the nephron, one could stronglyrecommendCurhoes & Moe (2014). Though their article was supposed to focusspecifically on the acid-base roles of the proximal tubule, they tend to go on a few tangents which accidentally happen to explain other aspects of renal physiology, which is useful.Welling & Welling (1988)is also an excellent resource, particularly for the structure and function relationship. A chapter from Brenneris also somehow available for free viadoctorlib.info, and there is enough well-referenced proximal tubule material there to seriously consume an afternoon or two.

Performance characteristics of the proximal tubule

The glomeruli of a pair of healthy kidneys turn 20% of its 1L/min blood flow into glomerular ultrafiltrate, which means the proximal tubule receives up to 200ml/min of fluid input, which works out to be 12L/hr or 288L/day.Apart from this unimaginably vast volume, the ultrafiltrate is full of goodies. Consider that the composition of the glomerular ultrafiltrate is basically that of deproteinated plasma. Harris et al (1974)micropunctured some rat tubules and determined that the concentrations of sodiumchloride and phosphate was basically the same as in the blood.Only calcium concentration was different, about 40% lower than that of plasma, largely owing to the fact that calcium circulates partially bound to albumin, and only the free fraction would get filtered. On top of that, bicarbonate and all the other slightly-larger-but-still-small molecules such as amino acids water-soluble vitamins and glucose also end up in the ultrafiltrate. The proximal tubule heroically reclaims these treasures for the organism. Over its transit through the proximal tubule, 60-70% of the water is reclaimed, 60-70% of the salt is reclaimed, and most of the organic nutrients and bicarbonate are also returned into the circulation. The cells of the proximal tubule are singlehandedly responsible for reabsorbing all the protein and peptide fragments that managed to sneak across the glomerular border. Amid all that activity, the cells of the proximal tubule manage to find the time to contribute essential metabolic activities, such as the activationof Vitamin D.

Structure of the proximal tubule

According to the nomenclature outlined byKriz et al (1988), there are several geographical territories even in this little patch of glomerular real estate. Specifically, you have:

  • A neck segment (just an elongation of Bowman's capsule)
  • A convoluted part
  • A straight part
  • Three main subdivisions, histologically:
    • S1: Convoluted part; transitions gradually into S2
    • S2: Half convoluted, half straight
    • S3: straight; mainly lays in the outer stripe and medullary ray

Representing this diagrammatically, with themeasurements borrowed fromWelling & Welling (1988),

Function of the proximal tubule (1)

Of course, that fat brown toothpaste-looking tube in the diagram is completely unrelated to the true scale and shape of this thing. For a true geometrically accurate representation of this part of the tubule, we can turn to Zhai et al (2006), whose 3D reconstructions of micro-sliced mouse nephrons can give us a true sense of scale and length:

Function of the proximal tubule (2)

In short, the most important features of the proximal tubular cells are:

  • Microvillous brush border: thismassively increases the surface area of the absorptive luminal surface (by 36 times, according to Welling & Welling, 1975).
  • Numerous endosomes:these cells are clearly involved in a lot of pinocytosis, and there are numerous vacuoles, representing substances being reabsorbed or actively secreted
  • Extensive lateral membrane interdigitations:the cells are connected to each other in a way that maximises the surface are and creates a complex extracellular compartment (the basolateral intercellular space)
  • Tight junctions:the basolateral intercellularspace is separated from the lumen of the tubule by impermeable cell junctions

The sides of the cells, where they connect to one another, aretopographically quite complex, in a way that maximises their lateral membrane surface area. At the apex, the cells are connected with each other via rather simple smooth membranes, but as you go further from the tubule lumen, you see the lateral membrane connecting these cells become more and more convoluted. To borrow the words ofWelling & Welling,

"...if the lateral cell membranes are seen as draperies or continuous sheets of fabric, the dimensions and area of that fabric increase greatly toward the base, much like a flaring skirt with a narrow waist"

Each basal cell therefore looks like some kind of marine echinoderm, with tiny branching foot processes interlocking with those of a neighbouring cell:

Function of the proximal tubule (3)

With some heroic maths and laborious manual measurement of electron microphotographs,Welling & Wellingwere able to estimate that the basal 20% of the cell's height account for 75% of its total basolateral surface area. In an earlier study (Welling & Welling, 1975) they had determined that the total apical (microvillous) surface area and the total basolateral surface are of the proximal tubule are both roughly the same, or about2.9 mm2for every 1mm of tubule length (that's about 300 cells). Given that the height of the cells is about 7μm, it becomes clear that even though they might appear like simple cuboidal epithelium under the microscope, functionally they are really just discs with an impossibly huge apical and basal surface area.

Absorptioninthe proximal convoluted tubule

The events and activities in the proximal convoluted tubule are so numerous that it is easy to get lost in them. What follows is an oversimplification, made necessary by the need to remain sane.

Basolateral Na+/K+ ATPase activity is massive in scale. The proximal tubule cells have a vast basolateral surface area, and it is bristling with these ATP-powered pumps. According to this nice bar graph fromDoucet (1988),the proximal convoluted tubule is where this activity is maximal (at least in the proximal nephron).

Function of the proximal tubule (4)

TheNa+/K+ ATPase is used to generate a sodium gradient.The constant removal of sodium from the basolateral surface allows the constant movement of sodium out of the tubule lumen.With the ATPase pumps so numerous, the flux of sodium can be truly massive in scale. This makes sense, as the proximal tubule might see about 28,000 mmol of sodium per day.

Function of the proximal tubule (5)

This gradient for sodium is used to co-transport basically everything else. Numerous apical co-transporters exist, acting either to symport anions or antiport cations. For example, anionic amino acids and glucose are co-transported, whereas hydrogen ions are exchanged. The number, diversity and function of these channels boggles the imagination.For the bewildered CICM trainee, it is not essential to know each and every detail here. The main fact to internalise is that the movement of sodium is required for the movement of all the other solutes.

Function of the proximal tubule (6)

As already mentioned, there's no need to laboriously memorise every apical transport protein, but there's a few worth knowing about. Some of these are drug targets, some are uniqye to the proximal tubule, and some are necessary for the understanding of other aspects of renal physiology. In short:

  • SGLT2 glucose and sodium co-transporter is the target of SGLT2 inhibitors such as empagliflozin.
  • Phosphate transport:the phosphate and sodium co-transporters (that's the only place where phosphate reabsorption is regulated in the nephron).
  • Ammonia transport:the proximal tubule exchanges sodium for ammoniaat the apical membrane; the resulting ammonia secretion is an important part of maintaining acid-base balance.
  • Sodium-hydrogen ion exchange: NHE-3 proton antiporter is also essential for acid-base homeostasis.

The specifics of that acid-base manipulation here will be left for another chapter, but, in order to simplify revision, one may be reminded that the proximal tubule is where brush border carbonic anhydrase is responsible for the reabsorption of bicarbonate, which it converts into CO2. This is the step susceptible to pharmacological manipulation (by acetazolamide), and the site of type 2 renal tubular acidosis:

Function of the proximal tubule (7)

The co-transport of sodium out of the tubule lumen decreases tubular fluid osmolality,as compared to that of extraluminal fluid. This produces a net movement of water out of the tubule, by all sorts of pathways. Some movement is paracellular (through the supposedly tight junctions) and some is facilitated by aquaporins in the apical membrane.As the result of this, the tubular fluid remains iso-osmolar over the length of the proximal tubule. When Gottschalk & Mylle punctured some rat tubules in 1959, they found that the tubular fluid osmolality was basically the same as the osmolality of the glomerular filtrate.

The net effect of all this is on the composition of the tubular fluid is best described by this relatively famous graph from Rector (1983):

Function of the proximal tubule (8)

The reason for the relative increase in tubular chloride concentration is largely the need to maintain electroneutrality, as other anionic solutes (amino acids, bicarbonate) are extracted and there is a net loss of negative charge.

Additionally,absorption of large solutesoccurs by vesicle-mediated pinocytosis in the proximal convoluted tubule. This is how stray protein and albumin is usually cleared from the proximal tubule fluid. The numerous endosomes seen in these tubular cells are full of this debris.

Secretory role of the proximal straight tubule

Unlike the heavily brush-bordered convoluted segment, this part of the tubule is mainly concerned with the elimination of things which might not have been filtered particularly well at the glomerulus, but which are nonetheless important to be rid of. This is the site of active secretion for many xenobiotic molecules, such as drugs and heavy metals. It isalso the part of the nephron which is most easily damaged by various"nephrotoxins".The anions of interest are collected out of peritubular capillary blood by OAT-1, the Organic Anion Transporter (and yes, there is a corresponding OCT-1 for cations). OAT-4 at the apical membrane then ejects these unwanted substances into the tubular fluid.

Wang &Kestenbaum (2018)list a whole ton of these substances which undergo active secretion here, of which some important onesare:

  • Organic metabolic byproducts
    • Urate
    • Hippurate
    • Creatinine
  • Vitamins
    • Folate
  • Drugs:
    • Beta-lactam antibiotics
    • Folate
    • Frusemide
    • Salicylates
    • Metformin
    • Cisplatin
    • Tetracycline
    • Methotrexate
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