EXCRETORY PRODUCTS AND THEIR ELIMINATION
Introduction
Types of Nitrogenous Wastes:
- Ammonia: Highly toxic and soluble, requires large amounts of water for elimination. Excreted by diffusion across body surfaces or through gill surfaces in aquatic animals.
- Urea: Less toxic than ammonia, produced in the liver of ureotelic animals (e.g., mammals) and excreted primarily by the kidneys.
- Uric Acid: Least toxic form, excreted by uricotelic animals (e.g., reptiles, birds, insects) with minimal water loss.
Types of Excretory Adaptations:
- Ammonotelism: Excretion of ammonia, common in aquatic organisms like bony fishes, amphibians, and aquatic insects.
- Ureotelism: Excretion of urea, prevalent in mammals, some amphibians, and marine fishes, allowing for conservation of water.
- Uricotelism: Excretion of uric acid, characteristic of reptiles, birds, land snails, and insects, minimizing water loss.
Excretory Structures:
- Protonephridia: Found in various invertebrates like flatworms, rotifers, some annelids, and cephalochordates. Primarily involved in osmoregulation.
- Nephridia: Tubular excretory structures in earthworms and other annelids, responsible for removing nitrogenous wastes and maintaining fluid and ionic balance.
- Malpighian Tubules: Excretory organs in insects, including cockroaches, aiding in nitrogenous waste removal and osmoregulation.
- Antennal Glands (Green Glands): Perform excretory functions in crustaceans such as prawns.
16.1 HUMAN EXCRETORY SYSTEM
Kidneys:
- Paired organs located in the abdominal cavity between the last thoracic and third lumbar vertebrae.
- Bean-shaped with dimensions of approximately 10-12 cm in length, 5-7 cm in width, and 2-3 cm in thickness.
- Average weight ranges from 120 to 170 grams.
- Notch called the hilum on the inner concave surface through which ureter, blood vessels, and nerves enter.
Renal Pelvis and Calyces:
- Renal pelvis is a broad, funnel-shaped space towards the center of the inner concave surface of the kidney.
- Contains projections called calyces.
- Functions as the collecting system for urine formed in the kidney.
Outer Cortex and Inner Medulla:
- Two distinct zones within the kidney.
- Cortex is the outer layer, and the medulla is the inner layer.
- Medulla is further divided into conical masses called medullary pyramids, which project into the calyces.
Capsule:
- Outer layer covering the kidney.
- Provides protection and structural support to the organ.
Ureters:
- Paired muscular tubes connecting each kidney to the urinary bladder.
- Transport urine from the kidneys to the bladder through peristaltic contractions.
Urinary Bladder:
- Hollow, muscular organ located in the pelvic cavity.
- Functions as a reservoir for urine until it is expelled from the body.
Urethra:
- Tube connecting the urinary bladder to the external environment.
- In males, also serves as the passage for semen during ejaculation.
Medullary Pyramids and Columns of Bertini:
- Medullary pyramids are conical structures within the renal medulla.
- They extend from the renal cortex towards the renal pelvis.
- Renal columns, also known as Columns of Bertini, are extensions of cortical tissue that project into the medulla between the pyramids.
Nephrons:
- Each kidney contains nearly one million nephrons, which are the functional units responsible for urine formation.
- Nephrons consist of two main parts: the glomerulus and the renal tubule.
Glomerulus and Bowman’s Capsule:
- Glomerulus is a tuft of capillaries formed by the afferent arteriole, a branch of the renal artery.
- Bowman’s capsule is a double-walled cup-like structure that encloses the glomerulus.
- Together, the glomerulus and Bowman’s capsule form the malpighian body or renal corpuscle.
Renal Tubule:
- The renal tubule begins with Bowman’s capsule and continues as the proximal convoluted tubule (PCT).
- Next is the hairpin-shaped Henle’s loop, which consists of a descending limb and an ascending limb.
- The ascending limb leads to the distal convoluted tubule (DCT).
- DCTs of multiple nephrons converge into a straight tube called the collecting duct.
Cortical and Juxta Medullary Nephrons:
- Nephrons are categorized based on the length of their loops of Henle.
- Cortical nephrons have short loops that extend minimally into the medulla.
- Juxta medullary nephrons have long loops that extend deep into the medulla.
Peritubular Capillaries and Vasa Recta:
- The efferent arteriole emerging from the glomerulus forms a capillary network around the renal tubule called the peritubular capillaries.
- In juxta medullary nephrons, a specialized capillary network known as the vasa recta runs parallel to the Henle’s loop.
- Vasa recta is either absent or highly reduced in cortical nephrons.
Glomerular Filtration:
- Occurs in the glomerulus, where blood is filtered through three layers: endothelium of glomerular blood vessels, epithelium of Bowman’s capsule, and a basement membrane.
- Podocytes, specialized epithelial cells of Bowman’s capsule, have intricate arrangements that leave minute spaces called filtration slits or slit pores.
- Almost all constituents of plasma except proteins pass into the Bowman’s capsule, resulting in ultrafiltration.
- Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) measures the amount of filtrate formed per minute, typically around 125 ml/minute in a healthy individual, equivalent to approximately 180 liters per day.
Regulation of GFR:
- Juxta glomerular apparatus (JGA) regulates GFR. It consists of cellular modifications in the distal convoluted tubule and the afferent arteriole.
- A decrease in GFR can activate JGA cells to release renin, stimulating glomerular blood flow and restoring GFR to normal levels.
Reabsorption:
- Nearly 99% of the filtrate (180 liters per day) is reabsorbed by renal tubules.
- Tubular epithelial cells perform reabsorption through active or passive mechanisms.
- Substances like glucose, amino acids, and sodium are actively reabsorbed, while nitrogenous wastes are absorbed passively.
- Water reabsorption also occurs passively in the initial segments of the nephron.
Secretion:
- Tubular cells secrete substances like hydrogen ions (H+), potassium ions (K+), and ammonia into the filtrate.
- Tubular secretion plays a crucial role in maintaining the ionic and acid-base balance of body fluids.
16.3 FUNCTION OF THE TUBULES
Proximal Convoluted Tubule (PCT):
- Lined by simple cuboidal brush border epithelium, increasing surface area for reabsorption.
- Reabsorbs nearly all essential nutrients and 70-80% of electrolytes and water.
- Helps maintain pH and ionic balance by selectively secreting hydrogen ions and ammonia into the filtrate and absorbing bicarbonate ions (HCO3–).
Henle’s Loop:
- Ascending limb: Minimal reabsorption, but crucial for maintaining high osmolarity of medullary interstitial fluid.
- Descending limb: Permeable to water but almost impermeable to electrolytes, concentrating the filtrate as it descends.
- Ascending limb: Impermeable to water but allows active or passive transport of electrolytes, resulting in dilution of the filtrate as it ascends.
Distal Convoluted Tubule (DCT):
- Conditionally reabsorbs sodium (Na+) and water.
- Capable of reabsorbing bicarbonate ions (HCO3–) and selectively secreting hydrogen and potassium ions and ammonia (NH3) to maintain pH and sodium-potassium balance in blood.
Collecting Duct:
- Extends from the cortex to the inner medulla, allowing significant water reabsorption to produce concentrated urine.
- Permits the passage of small amounts of urea into the medullary interstitium to maintain osmolarity.
- Plays a role in maintaining pH and ionic balance by selectively secreting hydrogen (H+) and potassium (K+) ions.
16.4 MECHANISM OF CONCENTRATION OF THE FILTRATE