the UrInary SyStem 227
(glow-mare-you-luss; plural: glom-
eruli). The cuplike wall region,
called the Bowman’s (glomer ular)
capsule, receives the substances
filtered from blood. The rest of the
nephron is a winding tubule (“little
tube”). Filtrate flows from the cup
into the proximal tubule (proxi-
mal means “next to”), then through
a hairpin-shaped loop of Henle
and into the distal tubule (“most
distant” from Bowman’s capsule). This part of the nephron
tubule empties into a collecting duct.
special vessels transport blood to, in,
and away from nephrons
Each hour, about 75 gallons of blood course through
your kidneys, delivered by the renal arteries. An afferent
arteriole brings blood to each nephron (afferent m e a n s “c a r-
rying toward”). The blood flows into the glomerulus inside
Bowman’s capsule. These capillaries are not like capillaries
in other parts of the body. Specialized pores between the
cells of their walls make them much more permeable than
other capillaries. Thus it is much easier for water and sol-
utes to move across the wall.
What do kidney nephrons do?
- Kidney nephrons filter water and solutes from blood. A cluster of
capillaries called a glomerulus is the nephron’s blood-filtering unit. - The capillaries in a glomerulus have pores in their walls that
make the vessels unusually permeable. - Arterioles transport blood to and from nephrons. Peritubular
capillaries weave around nephron tubules and deliver filtered
blood back to the general circulation.
taKe-Home message
Bowman’s capsule The
cuplike region of a nephron
that receives water and sol-
utes filtered from blood.
distal tubule The part of
the nephron tubule far-
thest from the Bowman’s
capsule.
loop of Henle The hairpin-
shaped midsection of a
nephron’s tubule.
peritubular capillaries
The set of capillaries that
weave around a nephron’s
tubules.
proximal tubule The por-
tion of the nephron tubule
closest to the Bowman’s
capsule.
Glomerular capillaries don’t
channel blood to venules, as other
capillaries do (Section 7.7). Instead,
they merge to form an efferent (“c a r-
rying away from”) arteriole. This
arteriole branches into peritubular
(“around the tubule”) capillaries.
As you can see in Figure 12.4B,
the peri tubular capillaries weave
around a nephron’s tubules. They
merge into venules, which carry fil-
tered blood out of the kidneys.
Figure 12.4 Animated! interacting with two sets of capillaries, nephrons are a kidney’s blood-filtering units.
a Diagram of a nephron. B The arterioles and capillaries associated with a nephron. (© Cengage Learning)
a Bowman’s capsule and tubular regions of
one nephron, cutaway view B^ Blood vessels associated with the nephron
proximal
tubule
(orange)
Bowman’s
capsule
(red)
loop of Henle
(yellow)
distal
tubule
(brown)
collecting
tubule (tan)
renal
cortex
renal
medulla
efferent arteriole
glomerulus
afferent arteriole
peritubular
capillaries
renal
artery
renal
vein
MicroScan/Phototake
Colored microscope
image of a glomerulus
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