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  • 11
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Kidney ; Goldblatt-Hypertension ; PAH-clearance ; PAH-Metabolism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary PAH-clearance studies were carried out separately on each kidney of both normal rats and rats with experimental Goldblatt-Hypertension. The rat and especially the rat kidney metabolizes a certain proportion of PAH-molecules 1. by splitting off the glycine-group forming p-aminobenzoate (PAB); 2. both PAH and PAB undergo partial N-acetylation. N-acetylated metabolites cannot be detected by the conventional analysis of PAH. Resorption of benzoates in the kidney results in a relatively high benzoate concentration in the renal vein. The complications created by these facts are discussed in relation to RPF-estimation using PAH. A correct determination of RPF by PAH is possible only if the analysis is carried out after an acid hydrolysis to make the detection of N-acetylated metabolites possible and if renal venous blood samples can be collected to correct for the reabsorbed benzoates. The clamped kidney of rats with Goldblatt-Hypertension is able to split glycine off from PAH but its capacity to N-acetylate is reduced. As a result identical PAH-clearances are found in both kidneys of these animals although their true RPF differ significantly.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 12
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 177 (1977), S. 523-538 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Cat kidney ; Lipids ; Cholesterol ; Reabsorption ; Histochemistry ; Electron microscopy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Lipid deposits in the cat kidney are mainly located in the epithelium of the proximal tubuli contorti, particularly in the pars contorta. As the amount of fatty acids in the blood of renal arteries is higher than in renal veins, the lipid inclusions are likely to be formed in the proximal convoluted tubule. Whether fat occurring in the urine has been released from the nephron epithelium and the mode of this release remains obscure. The structural equivalent of lipid extrusion into the tubules has not been observed. Components of the tubular lipids include triglycerides, phosphoglycerides and cholesterol. The results of the digitonin-cholesterol reaction favour the assumption that cholesterol is eliminated in the glomeruli and pinocytotically reabsorbed by the brush border cells, this process possibly serving recycling of this compound. The dilated basal labyrinth and intercellular space contain perpendicularly oriented lipid accumulations that reach the basal lamina. The ultrastructure of the lipid storing cells of pars contorta reacting positively for phosphoglyceride and cholesterol is characterised mainly by bodies with marginal plates. As far as can be judged from their morphology, these bodies are interpreted as large peroxisomes. A special feature of the pars recta are dumbbell shaped bodies and elongated or cup-like mitochondria concentrically surrounding cytoplasmic areas, as well as a well-developed smooth ER. In what way the organelles of the brush border cells are involved in catabolic and anabolic processes as far as renal lipid metabolism is concerned remains to be answered.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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