Glomerular microcirculation: Implications for diabetes, preeclampsia, and kidney injury

Author:

Goligorsky Michael S.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine New York Medical College at the Touro University Valhalla New York USA

2. Department of Pharmacology New York Medical College at the Touro University Valhalla New York USA

3. Department of Physiology New York Medical College at the Touro University Valhalla New York USA

Abstract

AbstractThis review outlines the features of tandem regulation of glomerular microcirculation by autoregulatory mechanisms and intraglomerular redistribution of blood flow. Multiple points of cooperation exist between autoregulatory and distributional mechanisms. Mutual interactions between myogenic and tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) mechanisms regulating the inflow are briefly discussed. In addition to this, TGF operation involving purinergic, autocoid, and NO signaling affects, however, not only afferent arteriolar tone, but mesangial cell tone as well. The latter reversibly reconfigures the distribution of blood flow between the shorter and longer pathways in the glomerular tuft. I advance a hypothesis that blood flow in these pathways spontaneously alternates, and mesangial cell tonicity serves as a rheostatic shift between them. Furthermore, humoral messengers from macula densa cells, themselves dependent on myogenic mechanisms, fine‐tune the secretion of renin and, subsequently, the local, intrarenal generation of angiotensin II, which, in turn, provides additional vasomotor signaling to glomerular capillaries through changing the tone of mesangial cells. This complex regulatory network may partially explain the phenomenon of renal functional reserve, as well as suggest implications for changes in renal function during pregnancy, early diabetes mellitus, and acute kidney injury.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

New York Community Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology

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