Electron microprobe analysis of intracellular elements in the rat kidney
- PMID: 7412109
- DOI: 10.1038/ki.1980.88
Electron microprobe analysis of intracellular elements in the rat kidney
Abstract
The concentrations of intracellular elements were determined by electron microprobe analysis in the nucleus and cytoplasm of freeze-dried cryosections of superficial proximal and distal tubules of the rat kidney. For the nucleus of the proximal tubular cell, the concentrations of sodium and chloride were 20 and 23 mmoles/kg of wet wt, and those of potassium and phosphorus were 144 and 150 mmoles/kg wet wt. For the nucleus of the distal tubular cell, the concentrations of sodium and chloride were significanlty lower (11 and 13 mmoles/kg wet wt), that of potassium was unchanged (143 mmoles), and that of phosphorus was significantly higher (175 mmoles). Towards the basolateral infoldings of the proximal and distal tubules and the brush border of the proximal tubules, the concentrations of sodium and chloride were higher and those of potassium and phosphorus were lower than those obtained in the nucleus, indicating the presence of extracellular compartments in these regions. Measurements performed in the centrally located cytoplasm of proximal and distal tubular cells, close to the nucleus, showed sodium and potassium concentrations to the indistinguishable from those in the nucleus, whereas chloride and phosphorus concentrations were considerably higher. These data demonstrate differences in the intracellular concentrations of phosphorus, sodium, and chloride between proximal and distal tubular cells. In neither the proximal nor the distal tubular cells, however, could a concentration difference for sodium and potassium between nucleus and cytoplasm be determined.
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