Cargando…

Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.

Analysis of the driving forces acting on the movement of potassium across individual membranes of tubule cells shows that both active and passive components play an important role in the regulation of potassium transport. Distal and cortical collecting tubule and papillary collecting duct elements a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Giebisch, G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1975
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1202761
_version_ 1782161638379487232
author Giebisch, G.
author_facet Giebisch, G.
author_sort Giebisch, G.
collection PubMed
description Analysis of the driving forces acting on the movement of potassium across individual membranes of tubule cells shows that both active and passive components play an important role in the regulation of potassium transport. Distal and cortical collecting tubule and papillary collecting duct elements are the key nephron sites participating in a complex fashion to translate a wide variety of metabolic challenges into the appropriate excretory response. The latter involves both secretory and reabsorptive activity. The analysis of the factors modulating tubular potassium transfer has shown that the potassium concentration in the cells of the distal nephron is a dey factactors involved in setting the cellular potassium concentration are active potassium uptake at the peritubular and luminal membrane of the cells as well as electrogenic solium extrusion across the peritubular boundary of the cells. Additional factors regulating potassium transport involve the electrical potential difference, sensitive to changes in the sodium concentration in the lumen, the flow rate past the late distal tubular site of potassium secretion, and the activity of a reabsorptive potassium pump in the luminal membranes of the cells. In the cortical collecting tubule, active potassium secretion is also present at the luminal membrane of the cell, but the role of such an additional secretory mechanism in the late distal tubule is presently unknown. Most of these individual transport mechanisms exist along the whole distal nephron, but their relative prominence varies among the late distal tubule, the cortical collecting tubule, and the papilary collecting duct.
format Text
id pubmed-2595168
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1975
publisher Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25951682008-12-05 Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport. Giebisch, G. Yale J Biol Med Research Article Analysis of the driving forces acting on the movement of potassium across individual membranes of tubule cells shows that both active and passive components play an important role in the regulation of potassium transport. Distal and cortical collecting tubule and papillary collecting duct elements are the key nephron sites participating in a complex fashion to translate a wide variety of metabolic challenges into the appropriate excretory response. The latter involves both secretory and reabsorptive activity. The analysis of the factors modulating tubular potassium transfer has shown that the potassium concentration in the cells of the distal nephron is a dey factactors involved in setting the cellular potassium concentration are active potassium uptake at the peritubular and luminal membrane of the cells as well as electrogenic solium extrusion across the peritubular boundary of the cells. Additional factors regulating potassium transport involve the electrical potential difference, sensitive to changes in the sodium concentration in the lumen, the flow rate past the late distal tubular site of potassium secretion, and the activity of a reabsorptive potassium pump in the luminal membranes of the cells. In the cortical collecting tubule, active potassium secretion is also present at the luminal membrane of the cell, but the role of such an additional secretory mechanism in the late distal tubule is presently unknown. Most of these individual transport mechanisms exist along the whole distal nephron, but their relative prominence varies among the late distal tubule, the cortical collecting tubule, and the papilary collecting duct. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1975-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2595168/ /pubmed/1202761 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Giebisch, G.
Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title_full Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title_fullStr Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title_full_unstemmed Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title_short Some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
title_sort some reflections on the mechanism of renal tubular potassium transport.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1202761
work_keys_str_mv AT giebischg somereflectionsonthemechanismofrenaltubularpotassiumtransport