Chapter
44 Osmoregulation and Excretion
Lecture Outline
Overview: A Balancing Act
·
The
physiological systems of animals operate within a fluid environment.
°
The
relative concentrations of water and solutes must be maintained within narrow
limits, despite variations in the animal’s external environment.
·
Metabolism
also poses the problem of disposal of wastes.
°
The
breakdown of proteins and nucleic acids is problematic because ammonia, the
primary metabolic waste from breakdown of these molecules, is very toxic.
·
An
organism maintains a physiological favorable environment by osmoregulation, regulating solute
balance and the gain and loss of water and excretion,
the removal of nitrogen-containing waste products of metabolism.
Concept 44.1 Osmoregulation balances the uptake
and loss of water and solutes
·
All
animals face the same central problem of osmoregulation.
°
Over
time, the rates of water uptake and loss must balance.
°
Animal
cells—which lack cell walls—swell and burst if there is a continuous net uptake
of water, or shrivel and die if there is a substantial net loss of water.
·
Water
enters and leaves cells by osmosis, the movement of water across a selectively
permeable membrane.
°
Osmosis
occurs whenever two solutions separated by a membrane differ in osmotic pressure,
or osmolarity (moles of solute per
liter of solution).
°
The
unit of measurement of osmolarity is milliosmoles per liter (mosm/L).
§
1
mosm/L is equivalent to a total solute concentration of 10−3 M.
§
The
osmolarity of human blood is about 300 mosm/L, while seawater has an osmolarity
of about 1,000 mosm/L.
·
If
two solutions separated by a selectively permeable membrane have the same
osmolarity, they are said to be isoosmotic.
·
There
is no net movement of water by
osmosis between isoosmotic solutions, although water molecules do cross at
equal rates in both directions.
°
When
two solutions differ in osmolarity, the one with the greater concentration of
solutes is referred to as hyperosmotic,
and the more dilute solution is hypoosmotic.
°
Water
flows by osmosis from a hypoosmotic solution to a hyperosmotic one.
Osmoregulators expend energy to control their
internal osmolarity; osmoconformers are isoosmotic with their surroundings.
·
There
are two basic solutions to the problem of balancing water gain with water loss.
°
One—available
only to marine animals—is to be isoosmotic to the surroundings as an osmoconformer.
§
Although
they do not compensate for changes in external osmolarity, osmoconformers often
live in water that has a very stable composition and, hence, they have a very
constant internal osmolarity.
·
In
contrast, an osmoregulator is an
animal that must control its internal osmolarity because its body fluids are
not isoosmotic with the outside environment.
°
An
osmoregulator must discharge excess water if it lives in a hypoosmotic
environment or take in water to offset osmotic loss if it inhabits a
hyperosmotic environment.
°
Osmoregulation
enables animals to live in environments that are uninhabitable to
osmoconformers, such as freshwater and terrestrial habitats.
°
It
also enables many marine animals to maintain internal osmolarities different
from that of seawater.
·
Whenever
animals maintain an osmolarity difference between the body and the external
environment, osmoregulation has an energy cost.
°
Because
diffusion tends to equalize concentrations in a system, osmoregulators must
expend energy to maintain the osmotic gradients via active transport.
°
The
energy costs depend mainly on how different an animal’s osmolarity is from its
surroundings, how easily water and solutes can move across the animal’s
surface, and how much membrane-transport work is required to pump solutes.
°
Osmoregulation
accounts for nearly 5% of the resting metabolic rate of many marine and
freshwater bony fishes.
·
Most
animals, whether osmoconformers or osmoregulators, cannot tolerate substantial
changes in external osmolarity and are said to be stenohaline.
°
In
contrast, euryhaline animals—which
include both some osmoregulators and osmoconformers—can survive large
fluctuations in external osmolarity.
°
For
example, various species of salmon migrate back and forth between freshwater
and marine environments.
°
The
food fish, tilapia, is an extreme example, capable of adjusting to any salt
concentration between freshwater and 2,000 mosm/L, twice that of seawater.
·
Most
marine invertebrates are osmoconformers.
°
Their
osmolarity is the same as seawater.
°
However,
they differ considerably from seawater in their concentrations of most specific
solutes.
°
Thus,
even an animal that conforms to the osmolarity of its surroundings does
regulate its internal composition.
·
Marine
vertebrates and some marine invertebrates are osmoregulators.
°
For
most of these animals, the ocean is a strongly dehydrating environment because
it is much saltier than internal fluids, and water is lost from their bodies by
osmosis.
°
Marine
bony fishes, such as cod, are hypoosmotic to seawater and constantly lose water
by osmosis and gain salt by diffusion and from the food they eat.
°
The
fishes balance water loss by drinking seawater and actively transporting
chloride ions out through their skin and gills.
§
Sodium
ions follow passively.
°
They
produce very little urine.
·
Marine
sharks and most other cartilaginous fishes (chondrichthyans) use a different
osmoregulatory “strategy.”
°
Like
bony fishes, salts diffuse into the body from seawater, and these salts are
removed by the kidneys, a special organ called the rectal gland, or in feces.
°
Unlike
bony fishes, marine sharks do not experience a continuous osmotic loss because
high concentrations of urea and trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) in body fluids
leads to an osmolarity slightly higher than seawater.
§
TMAO
protects proteins from damage by urea.
°
Consequently,
water slowly enters the shark’s body
by osmosis and in food, and is removed in urine.
·
In
contrast to marine organisms, freshwater animals are constantly gaining water
by osmosis and losing salts by diffusion.
°
This
happens because the osmolarity of their internal fluids is much higher than
that of their surroundings.
°
However,
the body fluids of most freshwater animals have lower solute concentrations
than those of marine animals, an adaptation to their low-salinity freshwater
habitat.
°
Many
freshwater animals, including fish such as perch, maintain water balance by
excreting large amounts of very dilute urine, and regaining lost salts in food
and by active uptake of salts from their surroundings.
·
Salmon
and other euryhaline fishes that migrate between seawater and freshwater
undergo dramatic and rapid changes in osmoregulatory status.
°
While
in the ocean, salmon osmoregulate as other marine fishes do, by drinking
seawater and excreting excess salt from the gills.
°
When
they migrate to fresh water, salmon cease drinking, begin to produce lots of
dilute urine, and their gills start taking up salt from the dilute
environment—the same as fishes that spend their entire lives in fresh water.
·
Dehydration
dooms most animals, but some aquatic invertebrates living in temporary ponds
and films of water around soil particles can lose almost all their body water
and survive in a dormant state, called anhydrobiosis,
when their habitats dry up.
°
For
example, tardigrades, or water bears, contain about 85% of their weight in
water when hydrated but can dehydrate to less than 2% water and survive in an
inactive state for a decade until revived by water.
·
Anhydrobiotic
animals must have adaptations that keep their cell membranes intact.
°
While
the mechanism that tardigrades use is still under investigation, researchers do
know that anhydrobiotic nematodes contain large amounts of sugars, especially
the disaccharide trehalose.
°
Trehalose,
a dimer of glucose, seems to protect cells by replacing water associated with
membranes and proteins.
°
Many
insects that survive freezing in the winter also use trehalose as a membrane
protectant.
·
The
threat of desiccation is perhaps the largest regulatory problem confronting
terrestrial plants and animals.
°
Humans
die if they lose about 12% of their body water.
°
Camels
can withstand twice that level of dehydration.
·
Adaptations
that reduce water loss are key to survival on land.
°
Most
terrestrial animals have body coverings that help prevent dehydration.
°
These
include waxy layers in insect exoskeletons, the shells of land snails, and the
multiple layers of dead, keratinized skin cells of most terrestrial
vertebrates.
°
Being
nocturnal also reduces evaporative water loss.
·
Despite
these adaptations, most terrestrial animals lose considerable water from moist
surfaces in their gas exchange organs, in urine and feces, and across the skin.
°
Land
animals balance their water budgets by drinking and eating moist foods and by
using metabolic water from aerobic respiration.
·
Some
animals are so well adapted for minimizing water loss that they can survive in
deserts without drinking.
°
For
example, kangaroo rats lose so little water that they can recover 90% of the
loss from metabolic water and gain the remaining 10% in their diet of seeds.
°
These
and many other desert animals do not drink.
Water balance and waste disposal depend on
transport epithelia.
·
The
ultimate function of osmoregulation is to maintain the composition of cellular
cytoplasm, but most animals do this indirectly by managing the composition of
an internal body fluid that bathes the cells.
°
In
animals with an open circulatory system, this fluid is hemolymph.
°
In
vertebrates and other animals with a closed circulatory system, the cells are
bathed in an interstitial fluid that is controlled through the composition of
the blood.
°
The
maintenance of fluid composition depends on specialized structures ranging from
cells that regulate solute movement to complex organs such as the vertebrate
kidney.
·
In
most animals, osmotic regulation and metabolic waste disposal depend on the
ability of a layer or layers of transport
epithelium to move specific solutes in controlled amounts in specific
directions.
°
Some
transport epithelia directly face the outside environment, while others line
channels connected to the outside by an opening on the body surface.
°
The
cells of the epithelium are joined by impermeable tight junctions that form a
barrier at the tissue-environment barrier.
·
In
most animals, transport epithelia are arranged into complex tubular networks
with extensive surface area.
°
For
example, the salt-secreting glands of some marine birds, such as the albatross,
secrete an excretory fluid that is much more salty than the ocean.
°
The
counter-current system in these glands removes salt from the blood, allowing
these organisms to drink seawater during their months at sea.
·
The
molecular structure of plasma membranes determines the kinds and directions of
solutes that move across the transport epithelium.
°
For
example, the salt-excreting glands of the albatross remove excess sodium
chloride from the blood.
°
By
contrast, transport epithelia in the gills of freshwater fishes actively pump
salts from the dilute water passing by the gill filaments into the blood.
°
Transport
epithelia in excretory organs often have the dual functions of maintaining
water balance and disposing of metabolic wastes.
Concept 44.2 An animal’s nitrogenous wastes
reflect its phylogeny and habitat
·
Because
most metabolic wastes must be dissolved in water when they are removed from the
body, the type and quantity of waste products may have a large impact on water
balance.
·
Nitrogenous
breakdown products of proteins and nucleic acids are among the most important
wastes in terms of their effect on osmoregulation.
°
During
their breakdown, enzymes remove nitrogen in the form of ammonia, a small and very toxic molecule.
°
Some
animals excrete ammonia directly, but many species first convert the ammonia to
other compounds that are less toxic but costly to produce.
·
Animals
that excrete nitrogenous wastes as ammonia need access to lots of water.
°
This
is because ammonia is very soluble but can be tolerated only at very low
concentrations.
°
Therefore,
ammonia excretion is most common in aquatic species.
°
Many
invertebrates release ammonia across the whole body surface.
°
In
fishes, most of the ammonia is lost as ammonium ions (NH4+)
at the gill epithelium.
§
Freshwater
fishes are able to exchange NH4+ for Na+ from
the environment, which helps maintain Na+ concentrations in body
fluids.
·
Ammonia
excretion is much less suitable for land animals.
°
Because
ammonia is so toxic, it can be transported and excreted only in large volumes
of very dilute solutions.
°
Most
terrestrial animals and many marine organisms (which tend to lose water to
their environment by osmosis) do not have access to sufficient water.
·
Instead,
mammals, most adult amphibians, sharks, and some marine bony fishes and turtles
excrete mainly urea.
°
Urea
is synthesized in the liver by combining ammonia with carbon dioxide and is
excreted by the kidneys.
·
The
main advantage of urea is its low toxicity, about 100,000 times less than that
of ammonia.
°
Urea
can be transported and stored safely at high concentrations.
°
This
reduces the amount of water needed for nitrogen excretion when releasing a
concentrated solution of urea rather than a dilute solution of ammonia.
·
The
main disadvantage of urea is that animals must expend energy to produce it from
ammonia.
°
In
weighing the relative advantages of urea versus ammonia as the form of
nitrogenous waste, it makes sense that many amphibians excrete mainly ammonia
when they are aquatic tadpoles.
§
They
switch largely to urea when they are land-dwelling adults.
·
Land
snails, insects, birds, and many reptiles excrete uric acid as the main nitrogenous waste.
°
Like
urea, uric acid is relatively nontoxic.
°
But
unlike either ammonia or urea, uric acid is largely insoluble in water and can
be excreted as a semisolid paste with very little water loss.
°
While
saving even more water than urea, it is even more energetically expensive to
produce.
·
Uric
acid and urea represent different adaptations for excreting nitrogenous wastes
with minimal water loss.
·
Mode
of reproduction appears to have been important in choosing among these
alternatives.
°
Soluble
wastes can diffuse out of a shell-less amphibian egg (ammonia) or be carried
away by the mother’s blood in a mammalian embryo (urea).
°
However,
the shelled eggs of birds and reptiles are not permeable to liquids, which
means that soluble nitrogenous wastes trapped within the egg could accumulate
to dangerous levels.
§
Even
urea is toxic at very high concentrations.
°
Uric
acid precipitates out of solution and can be stored within the egg as a
harmless solid left behind when the animal hatches.
·
The
type of nitrogenous waste also depends on habitat.
°
For
example, terrestrial turtles (which often live in dry areas) excrete mainly
uric acid, while aquatic turtles excrete both urea and ammonia.
°
In
some species, individuals can change their nitrogenous wastes when
environmental conditions change.
§
For
example, certain tortoises that usually produce urea shift to uric acid when
temperature increases and water becomes less available.
·
Excretion
of nitrogenous wastes is a good illustration of how response to the environment
occurs on two levels.
°
Over
generations, evolution determines the limits of physiological responses for a
species.
°
During
their lives, individual organisms make adjustments within these evolutionary
constraints.
·
The
amount of nitrogenous waste produced is coupled to the energy budget and
depends on how much and what kind of food an animal eats.
°
Because
they use energy at high rates, endotherms eat more food—and thus produce more
nitrogenous wastes—per unit volume than ectotherms.
°
Carnivores
(which derive much of their energy from dietary proteins) excrete more nitrogen
than animals that obtain most of their energy from lipids or carbohydrates.
Concept 44.3 Diverse excretory systems are variations on a tubular
theme
·
Although
the problems of water balance on land or in salt water or fresh water are very
different, the solutions all depend on the regulation of solute movements
between internal fluids and the external environment.
°
Much
of this is handled by excretory systems, which are central to homeostasis
because they dispose of metabolic wastes and control body fluid composition by
adjusting the rates of loss of particular solutes.
Most excretory systems produce urine by
refining a filtrate derived from body fluids.
·
While
excretory systems are diverse, nearly all produce urine in a process that
involves several steps.
°
First,
body fluid (blood, coelomic fluid, or hemolymph) is collected.
§
The
initial fluid collection usually involves filtration
through selectively permeable membranes consisting of a single layer of
transport epithelium.
§
Hydrostatic
pressure forces water and small solutes into the excretory system.
ŕ
This
fluid is called the filtrate.
°
Filtration
is largely nonselective.
§
It
is important to recover small molecules from the filtrate and return them to
the body fluids.
§
Excretory
systems use active transport to reabsorb valuable solutes in a process of selective reabsorption.
§
Nonessential
solutes and wastes are left in the filtrate or added to it by selective secretion, which also uses active
transport.
°
The
pumping of various solutes also adjusts the osmotic movement of water into or
out of the filtrate.
§
The
processed filtrate is excreted as urine.
·
Flatworms
have an excretory system called protonephridia,
consisting of a branching network of dead-end tubules.
°
These
are capped by a flame bulb with a tuft of cilia that draws water and solutes
from the interstitial fluid, through the flame bulb, and into the tubule
system.
·
The
urine in the tubules exits through openings called nephridiopores.
°
Excreted
urine is very dilute in freshwater flatworms.
°
Apparently,
the tubules reabsorb most solutes before the urine exits the body.
°
In
these freshwater flatworms, the major function of the flame-bulb system is
osmoregulation, while most metabolic wastes diffuse across the body surface or
are excreted into the gastrovascular cavity.
°
However,
in some parasitic flatworms, protonephridia do dispose of nitrogenous wastes.
°
Protonephridia
are also found in rotifers, some annelids, larval molluscs, and lancelets.
·
Metanephridia, another tubular excretory
system, consist of internal openings that collect body fluids from the coelom
through a ciliated funnel, the nephrostome, and release the fluid to the
outside through the nephridiopore.
°
Each
segment of an annelid worm has a pair of metanephridia.
·
An
earthworm’s metanephridia have both excretory and osmoregulatory functions.
°
As
urine moves along the tubule, the transport epithelium bordering the lumen
reabsorbs most solutes and returns them to the blood in the capillaries.
°
Nitrogenous
wastes remain in the tubule and are dumped outside.
°
Because
earthworms experience a net uptake of water from damp soil, their metanephridia
balance water influx by producing dilute urine.
·
Insects
and other terrestrial arthropods have organs called Malpighian tubules that remove nitrogenous wastes and also function
in osmoregulation.
°
These
open into the digestive system and dead-end at tips that are immersed in the
hemolymph.
·
The
transport epithelium lining the tubules secretes certain solutes, including
nitrogenous wastes, from the hemolymph into the lumen of the tubule.
°
Water
follows the solutes into the tubule by osmosis, and the fluid then passes back
to the rectum, where most of the solutes are pumped back into the hemolymph.
°
Water
again follows the solutes, and the nitrogenous wastes, primarily insoluble uric
acid, are eliminated along with the feces.
§
This
system is highly effective in conserving water and is one of several key
adaptations contributing to the tremendous success of insects on land.
·
The
kidneys of vertebrates usually function in both osmoregulation and excretion.
°
Like
the excretory organs of most animal phyla, kidneys are built of tubules.
°
The
osmoconforming hagfishes, which are not vertebrates but are among the most
primitive living chordates, have kidneys with segmentally arranged excretory
tubules.
§
This
suggests that the excretory segments of vertebrate ancestors were segmented.
°
However,
the kidneys of most vertebrates are compact, nonsegmented organs containing
numerous tubules arranged in a highly organized manner.
°
The
vertebrate excretory system includes a dense network of capillaries intimately
associated with the tubules, along with ducts and other structures that carry
urine out of the tubules and kidney and eventually out of the body.
Concept 44.4 Nephrons and associated blood vessels
are the functional units of the mammalian kidney
·
Mammals
have a pair of bean-shaped kidneys.
°
Each
kidney is supplied with blood by a renal
artery and drained by a renal vein.
°
In
humans, the kidneys account for less than 1% of body weight, but they receive
about 20% of resting cardiac output.
·
Urine
exits each kidney through a duct called the ureter, and both ureters drain through a common urinary bladder.
°
During
urination, urine is expelled from the urinary bladder through a tube called the
urethra, which empties to the
outside near the vagina in females or through the penis in males.
°
Sphincter
muscles near the junction of the urethra and the bladder control urination.
·
The
mammalian kidney has two distinct regions, an outer renal cortex and an inner renal
medulla.
°
Both
regions are packed with microscopic excretory tubules, nephrons, and their associated blood vessels.
°
Each
nephron consists of a single long tubule and a ball of capillaries, called the glomerulus.
°
The
blind end of the tubule forms a cup-shaped swelling, called Bowman’s capsule, that surrounds the
glomerulus.
°
Each
human kidney contains about a million nephrons, with a total tubule length of
80 km.
·
Filtration
occurs as blood pressure forces fluid from the blood in the glomerulus into the
lumen of Bowman’s capsule.
°
The
porous capillaries, along with specialized capsule cells called podocytes, are
permeable to water and small solutes but not to blood cells or large molecules
such as plasma proteins.
°
The
filtrate in Bowman’s capsule contains salt, glucose, amino acids, vitamins,
nitrogenous wastes such as urea, and other small molecules.
·
From
Bowman’s capsule, the filtrate passes through three regions of the nephron: the
proximal tubule; the loop of Henle, a hairpin turn with a
descending limb and an ascending limb; and the distal tubule.
°
The
distal tubule empties into a collecting
duct, which receives processed filtrate from many nephrons.
°
The
many collecting ducts empty into the renal
pelvis, which is drained by the ureter.
·
In
the human kidney, about 80% of the nephrons, the cortical nephrons, have reduced loops of Henle and are almost
entirely confined to the renal cortex.
°
The
other 20%, the juxtamedullary nephrons,
have well-developed loops that extend deeply into the renal medulla.
°
Only
mammals and birds have juxtamedullary nephrons; the nephrons of other
vertebrates lack loops of Henle.
°
It
is the juxtamedullary nephrons that enable mammals to produce urine that is
hyperosmotic to body fluids, conserving water.
·
The
nephron and the collecting duct are lined by a transport epithelium that processes
the filtrate to form the urine.
°
Their
most important task is to reabsorb solutes and water.
°
The
nephrons and collecting ducts reabsorb nearly all of the sugar, vitamins, and
other organic nutrients from the initial filtrate and about 99% of the water.
°
This
reduces 180 L of initial filtrate to about 1.5 L of urine to be voided.
·
Each
nephron is supplied with blood by an afferent
arteriole, a branch of the renal artery that subdivides into the
capillaries of the glomerulus.
°
The
capillaries converge as they leave the glomerulus, forming an efferent arteriole.
°
This
vessel subdivides again into the peritubular
capillaries, which surround the proximal and distal tubules.
°
Additional
capillaries extend downward to form the vasa
recta, a loop of capillaries that serves the loop of Henle.
°
The
tubules and capillaries are immersed in interstitial fluid, through which
substances diffuse.
·
Although
the excretory tubules and their surrounding capillaries are closely associated, they do not exchange
materials directly.
°
The
tubules and capillaries are immersed in interstitial fluid, through which
various materials diffuse between the plasma in the capillaries and the
filtrate within the nephron tubule.
·
Filtrate
from Bowman’s capsule flows through the nephron and collecting ducts as it
becomes urine.
·
Secretion
and reabsorption in the proximal tubule substantially alter the volume and
composition of filtrate.
°
For
example, the cells of the transport epithelium help maintain a constant pH in
body fluids by controlled secretions of hydrogen ions or ammonia.
°
The
cells also synthesize and secrete ammonia, which neutralizes the acid.
°
The
proximal tubules reabsorb about 90% of the important buffer bicarbonate (HCO3−).
°
Drugs
and other poisons that have been processed in the liver pass from the
peritubular capillaries into the interstitial fluid and then across the
epithelium to the nephron’s lumen.
°
Valuable
nutrients, including glucose, amino acids, and K+, are actively or
passively absorbed from filtrate.
·
One
of the most important functions of the proximal
tubule is reabsorption of most of the NaCl and water from the initial
filtrate volume.
°
Salt
in the filtrate diffuses into the cells of the transport epithelium.
°
The
epithelial cells actively transport Na+ into the interstitial fluid.
°
This
transfer of positive charge is balanced by the passive transport of Cl−
out of the tubule.
°
As
salt moves from the filtrate to the interstitial fluid, water follows by
osmosis.
°
The
exterior side of the epithelium has a much smaller surface area than the side
facing the lumen, which minimizes leakage of salt and water back into the
tubule, and instead they diffuse into the peritubular capillaries.
·
Reabsorption
of water continues as the filtrate moves into the descending limb of the loop of Henle.
°
This
transport epithelium is freely permeable to water but not very permeable to
salt and other small solutes.
°
For
water to move out of the tubule by osmosis, the interstitial fluid bathing the
tubule must be hyperosmotic to the filtrate.
°
Because
the osmolarity of the interstitial fluid becomes progressively greater from the
outer cortex to the inner medulla, the filtrate moving within the descending
loop of Henle continues to lose water.
·
In
contrast to the descending limb, the transport epithelium of the ascending limb of the loop of Henle is
permeable to salt, not water.
°
As
filtrate ascends the thin segment of the ascending limb, NaCl diffuses out of
the permeable tubule into the interstitial fluid, increasing the osmolarity of
the medulla.
°
The
active transport of salt from the filtrate into the interstitial fluid
continues in the thick segment of the ascending limb.
°
By
losing salt without giving up water, the filtrate becomes progressively more
dilute as it moves up to the cortex in the ascending limb of the loop.
·
The
distal tubule plays a key role in
regulating the K+ and NaCl concentrations in body fluids by varying
the amount of K+ that is secreted into the filtrate and the amount
of NaCl reabsorbed from the filtrate.
°
Like
the proximal tubule, the distal tubule also contributes to pH regulation by
controlled secretion of H+ and the reabsorption of bicarbonate (HCO3−).
·
By
actively reabsorbing NaCl, the transport epithelium of the collecting duct plays a large role in determining how much salt is
actually excreted in the urine.
°
Though
the degree of its permeability is under hormonal control, the epithelium is
permeable to water but not to salt or (in the renal cortex) to urea.
°
As
the collecting duct traverses the gradient of osmolarity in the kidney, the
filtrate becomes increasingly concentrated as it loses more and more water by
osmosis to the hyperosmotic interstitial fluid.
°
In
the inner medulla, the duct becomes permeable to urea.
§
Because
of the high urea concentration in the filtrate at this point, some urea diffuses
out of the duct and into the interstitial fluid.
§
Along
with NaCl, this urea contributes to the high osmolarity of the interstitial
fluid in the medulla.
§
This
high osmolarity enables the mammalian kidney to conserve water by excreting
urine that is hyperosmotic to general body fluids.
Concept 44.5 The mammalian kidney’s ability to
conserve water is a key terrestrial adaptation
·
The
osmolarity of human blood is about 300 mosm/L, but the kidney can excrete urine
up to four times as concentrated—about 1,200 mosm/L.
°
At
an extreme of water conservation, Australian hopping mice, which live in desert
regions, can produce urine concentrated to 9,300 mosm/L—25 times as
concentrated as their body fluid.
·
In
a mammalian kidney, the cooperative action and precise arrangement of the loops
of Henle and the collecting ducts are largely responsible for the osmotic
gradients that concentrate the urine.
°
In
addition, the maintenance of osmotic differences and the production of
hyperosmotic urine are only possible because considerable energy is expended by
the active transport of solutes against concentration gradients.
°
In
essence, the nephrons can be thought of as tiny energy-consuming machines whose
function is to produce a region of high osmolarity in the kidney, which can
then extract water from the urine in the collecting duct.
°
The
two primary solutes in this osmolarity gradient are NaCl and urea.
·
The
juxtamedullary nephrons, which maintain an osmotic gradient in the kidney and
use that gradient to excrete a hyperosmotic urine, are the key to understanding
the physiology of the mammalian kidney as a water-conserving organ.
°
Filtrate
passing from Bowman’s capsule to the proximal tubule has an osmolarity of about
300 mosm/L.
°
As
the filtrate flows through the proximal tubule in the renal cortex, large
amounts of water and salt are
reabsorbed.
°
The
volume of the filtrate decreases substantially, but its osmolarity remains
about the same.
·
The
ability of the mammalian kidney to convert interstitial fluid at 300 mosm/L to
1,200 mosm/L as urine depends on a countercurrent multiplier between the
ascending and descending limbs of the loop of Henle.
·
As
the filtrate flows from the cortex to the medulla in the descending limb of the
loop of Henle, water leaves the tubule by osmosis.
°
The
osmolarity of the filtrate increases as solutes, including NaCl, become more
concentrated.
°
The
highest molarity occurs at the elbow of the loop of Henle.
°
This
maximizes the diffusion of salt out of the tubule as the filtrate rounds the
curve and enters the ascending limb, which is permeable to salt but not to
water.
°
The
descending limb produces progressively saltier filtrate, and the ascending limb
exploits this concentration of NaCl to help maintain a high osmolarity in the
interstitial fluid of the renal medulla.
·
The
loop of Henle has several qualities of a countercurrent system.
°
Although
the two limbs of the loop are not in direct contact, they are close enough to
exchange substances through the interstitial fluid.
°
The
nephron can concentrate salt in the inner medulla largely because exchange
between opposing flows in the descending and ascending limbs overcomes the
tendency for diffusion to even out salt concentrations throughout the kidney’s
interstitial fluid.
·
The
vasa recta is also a countercurrent system, with descending and ascending
vessels carrying blood in opposite directions through the kidney’s osmolarity
gradient.
°
As
the descending vessel conveys blood toward the inner medulla, water is lost
from the blood and NaCl diffuses into it.
°
These
fluxes are reversed as blood flows back toward the cortex in the ascending
vessel.
°
Thus,
the vasa recta can supply the kidney with nutrients and other important
substances without interfering with the osmolarity gradient necessary to
excrete a hyperosmotic urine.
·
The
countercurrent-like characteristics of the loop of Henle and the vasa recta
maintain the steep osmotic gradient between the medulla and the cortex.
°
This
gradient is initially created by active transport of NaCl out of the thick
segment of the ascending limb of the loop of Henle into the interstitial fluid.
°
This
active transport and other active transport systems in the kidney consume
considerable ATP, requiring the kidney to have one of the highest relative
metabolic rates of any organ.
·
By
the time the filtrate reaches the distal tubule, it is actually hypoosmotic to
body fluids because of active transport of NaCl out of the thick segment of the
ascending limb.
°
As
the filtrate descends again toward the medulla in the collecting duct, water is
extracted by osmosis into the hyperosmotic interstitial fluids, but salts
cannot diffuse in because the epithelium is impermeable to salt.
°
This
concentrates salt, urea, and other solutes in the filtrate.
°
Some
urea leaks out of the lower portion of the collecting duct, contributing to the
high interstitial osmolarity of the inner medulla.
·
Before
leaving the kidney, the urine may obtain the osmolarity of the interstitial
fluid in the inner medulla, which can be as high as 1,200 mosm/L.
°
Although
isoosmotic to the inner medulla’s
interstitial fluid, the urine is hyperosmotic
to blood and interstitial fluid elsewhere in the body.
°
This
high osmolarity allows the solutes remaining in the urine to be secreted from
the body with minimal water loss.
·
The
juxtamedullary nephron is a key adaptation to terrestrial life, enabling
mammals to get rid of salts and nitrogenous wastes without squandering water.
°
The
remarkable ability of the mammalian kidney to produce hyperosmotic urine is
completely dependent on the precise arrangement of the tubules and collecting
ducts in the renal cortex and medulla.
°
The
kidney is one of the clearest examples of how the function of an organ is
inseparably linked to its structure.
·
One
important aspect of the mammalian kidney is its ability to adjust both the
volume and osmolarity of urine, depending on the animal’s water and salt
balance and the rate of urea production.
°
With
high salt intake and low water availability, a mammal can excrete urea and salt
with minimal water loss in small volumes of hyperosmotic urine.
°
If
salt is scarce and fluid intake is high, the kidney can get rid of excess water
with little salt loss by producing large volumes of hypoosmotic urine (as
dilute as 70 mosm/L).
°
This
versatility in osmoregulatory function is managed with a combination of nervous
and hormonal controls.
·
Regulation
of blood osmolarity is maintained by hormonal control of the kidney by negative
feedback circuits.
·
One
hormone important in regulating water balance is antidiuretic hormone (ADH).
°
ADH
is produced in the hypothalamus of the brain and stored in and released from
the pituitary gland, which lies just below the hypothalamus.
°
Osmoreceptor
cells in the hypothalamus monitor the osmolarity of the blood.
·
When
blood osmolarity rises above a set point of 300 mosm/L, more ADH is released
into the bloodstream and reaches the kidney.
°
ADH
induces the epithelium of the distal tubules and collecting ducts to become
more permeable to water.
°
This
amplifies water reabsorption.
°
This
reduces urine volume and helps prevent further increase of blood osmolarity
above the set point.
·
By
negative feedback, the subsiding osmolarity of the blood reduces the activity
of osmoreceptor cells in the hypothalamus, and less ADH is secreted.
°
Only
a gain of additional water in food and drink can bring osmolarity all the way
back down to 300 mosm/L.
°
ADH
alone only prevents further movements away from the set point.
·
Conversely,
if a large intake of water has reduced blood osmolarity below the set point,
very little ADH is released.
°
This
decreases the permeability of the distal tubules and collecting ducts, so water
reabsorption is reduced, resulting in an increased discharge of dilute urine.
°
Alcohol
can disturb water balance by inhibiting the release of ADH, causing excessive
urinary water loss and dehydration (causing some symptoms of a hangover).
°
Normally,
blood osmolarity, ADH release, and water reabsorption in the kidney are all
linked in a feedback loop that contributes to homeostasis.
·
A
second regulatory mechanism involves a special tissue called the juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA),
located near the afferent arteriole that supplies blood to the glomerulus.
°
When
blood pressure or blood volume in the afferent arteriole drops, the enzyme
renin initiates chemical reactions that convert a plasma protein
angiotensinogen to a peptide called angiotensin
II.
·
Acting
as a hormone, angiotensin II increases blood pressure and blood volume in
several ways.
°
It
raises blood pressure by constricting arterioles, decreasing blood flow to many
capillaries, including those of the kidney.
°
It
also stimulates the proximal tubules to reabsorb more NaCl and water.
§
This
reduces the amount of salt and water excreted and, consequently, raises blood
pressure and volume.
°
It
also stimulates the adrenal glands, located atop the kidneys, to release a
hormone called aldosterone.
§
This
acts on the distal tubules, which reabsorb Na+ and water, increasing
blood volume and pressure.
·
In
summary, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
system (RAAS) is part of a complex feedback circuit that functions in
homeostasis.
°
A
drop in blood pressure triggers a release of renin from the JGA.
°
In
turn, the rise in blood pressure and volume resulting from the various actions
of angiotensin II and aldosterone reduce the release of renin.
·
While
both ADH and RAAS increase water reabsorption, they counter different
osmoregulatory problems.
°
The
release of ADH is a response to an increase in the osmolarity of the blood, as
when the body is dehydrated from excessive loss or inadequate intake of water.
°
However,
a situation that causes excessive loss of salt and body fluids—an injury or
severe diarrhea, for example—will reduce blood volume without increasing osmolarity.
°
The
RAAS will detect the fall in blood volume and pressure and respond by
increasing water and Na+ reabsorption.
·
Normally,
ADH and the RAAS are partners in homeostasis.
°
ADH
alone would lower blood Na+ concentration by stimulating water
reabsorption in the kidney.
°
But
the RAAS helps maintain balance by stimulating Na+ reabsorption.
·
Still
another hormone, atrial natriuretic
factor (ANF), opposes the RAAS.
°
The
walls of the atria release ANF in response to an increase in blood volume and
pressure.
°
ANF
inhibits the release of renin from the JGA, inhibits NaCl reabsorption by the
collecting ducts, and reduces aldosterone release from the adrenal glands.
°
These
actions lower blood pressure and volume.
°
Thus,
the ADH, the RAAS, and ANF provide an elaborate system of checks and balances
that regulates the kidney’s ability to control the osmolarity, salt concentration,
volume, and pressure of blood.
·
The
South American vampire bat, Desmodus
rotundas, illustrates the flexibility of the mammalian kidney to adjust
rapidly to contrasting osmoregulatory and excretory problems.
°
This
species feeds on the blood of large birds and mammals by making an incision in
the victim’s skin and then lapping up blood from the wound.
·
Because
they fly long distances to locate a suitable victim, they benefit from
consuming as much blood as possible when they do find prey—so much so that a bat
would be too heavy to fly after feeding.
°
The
bat uses its kidneys to offload much of the water absorbed from a blood meal by
excreting large volumes of dilute urine as it feeds.
°
Having
lost enough water to fly, the bat returns to its roost in a cave or hollow
tree, where it spends the day.
·
In
the roost, the bat faces a very different regulatory problem.
°
Its
food is mostly protein, which generates large quantities of urea, but roosting
bats don’t have access to drinking water.
°
Their
kidneys shift to producing small quantities of highly concentrated urine,
disposing of the urea load while conserving as much water as possible.
°
The
vampire bat’s ability to alternate rapidly between producing large amounts of
dilute urine and small amounts of very hyperosmotic urine is an essential part
of its adaptation to an unusual food source.
Concept 44.6 Diverse adaptations of the vertebrate
kidney have evolved in different environments
·
Variations
in nephron structure and function equip the kidneys of different vertebrates
for osmoregulation in their various habitats.
°
Mammals
that excrete the most hyperosmotic urine, such as hopping mice and other desert
mammals, have exceptionally long loops of Henle.
§
This
maintains steep osmotic gradients, resulting in very concentrated urine.
°
In
contrast, beavers, which rarely face problems of dehydration, have nephrons
with short loops, resulting in a much lower ability to concentrate urine.
·
Birds,
like mammals, have kidneys with juxtamedullary nephrons that specialize in
conserving water.
°
However,
the nephrons of birds have much shorter loops of Henle than do mammalian
nephrons.
°
Bird
kidneys cannot concentrate urine to the osmolarities achieved by mammalian
kidneys.
°
The
main water conservation adaptation of birds is the use of uric acid as the
nitrogen excretion molecule.
·
The
kidneys of other reptiles, having only cortical nephrons, produce urine that
is, at most, isoosmotic to body fluids.
°
However,
the epithelium of the cloaca helps conserve fluid by reabsorbing some of the
water present in urine and feces.
°
Also,
like birds, most other terrestrial reptiles excrete nitrogenous wastes as uric
acid.
·
In
contrast to mammals and birds, a freshwater fish must excrete excess water
because the animal is hyperosmotic to its surroundings.
°
Instead
of conserving water, the nephrons produce a large volume of very dilute urine.
°
Freshwater
fishes conserve salts by reabsorption of ions from the filtrate in the
nephrons.
·
Amphibian
kidneys function much like those of freshwater fishes.
°
When
in fresh water, the skin of the frog accumulates certain salts from the water
by active transport, and the kidneys excrete dilute urine.
°
On
land, where dehydration is the most pressing problem, frogs conserve body fluid
by reabsorbing water across the epithelium of the urinary bladder.
·
Marine
bony fishes, being hypoosmotic to their surroundings, have the opposite problem
of their freshwater relatives.
°
In
many species, nephrons have small glomeruli or lack glomeruli altogether.
°
Concentrated
urine is produced by secreting ions into excretory tubules.
°
The
kidneys of marine fishes excrete very little urine and function mainly to get
rid of divalent ions such as Ca2+, Mg2+,
and SO42−, which the fish takes in by its incessant
drinking of seawater.
°
Its
gills excrete mainly monovalent ions such as Na+ and Cl−
and the bulk of its nitrogenous wastes in the form of NH4+.