4.5 Article

A dual-pathway ultrastructural model for the tight junction of rat proximal tubule epithelium

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-RENAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 285, Issue 2, Pages F241-F257

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00331.2002

Keywords

paracellular pathway; water transport; compartment model; reflection coefficient

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [1-R01-DK-29857] Funding Source: Medline

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A dual-pathway model is proposed for transport across the tight junction (TJ) in rat proximal tubule: large slit breaks formed by infrequent discontinuities in the TJ complex and numerous small circular pores, with spacing similar to that of claudin-2. This dual-pathway model is developed in the context of a proximal tubule model (Weinstein AM. Am J Physiol Renal Fluid Electrolyte Physiol 247: F848 - F862, 1984) to provide an ultrastructural view of solute and water fluxes. Tubule model paramters ( TJ reflection coefficient and water permeability), plus the measured epithelial NaCl and sucrose permeabilities, provide constraints for the dual-pathway model, which yields the small-pore radius and spacing and large slit height and area. For a small-pore spacing of 20.2 nm, comparable to the distance between adjacent particle pairs in apposing TJ strands, the small-pore radius is 0.668 nm and the large slit breaks have a height of 19.6 nm, occupying 0.04% of the total TJ length. This pore/slit geometry also satisfies the measured permeability for mannitol. The numerous small circular pores account for 91.25% of TJ NaCl permeability but only 5.0% of TJ water permeability. The infrequent large slit breaks in the TJ account for 95.0% of TJ water permeability but only 8.7% of TJ NaCl permeability. Sucrose and mannitol (4.6- and 3.6-Angstrom radius) can pass through both the large slit breaks and the small pores. For sucrose, 78.3% of the flux is via the slits and 21.7% via the pores; for mannitol, the flux is split nearly evenly between the two pathways, 50.8 and 49.2%. In this ultrastructural model, the TJ water permeability is 21.2% of the entire transepithelial water permeability and thus an order of magnitude greater than that predicted by the single-pore/slit theory (Preisig PA and Berry CA. Am J Physiol Renal Fluid Electrolyte Physiol 249: F124 F131, 1985).

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