Abstract: | To explain how hydrostatic pressure differences between tubule lumen and interstitium modulate isotonic reabsorption rates, we developed a model of NaCl and water flow through paracellular pathways of the proximal tubule. Structural elements of the model are a tight junction membrane, an intercellular channel whose walls transport NaCl actively at a constant rate, and a basement membrane. Equations of change were derived for the channel, boundary conditions were formulated from irreversible thermodynamics, and a pressure-area relationship typical of thin-walled tubing was assumed. The boundary value problem was solved numerically. The principal conclusions are: 1) channel NaCl concentration must remain within a few mOsm of isotonic values for reabsorption rates to be modulated by transtubular pressure differences known to affect this system: 2) basement membrane and channel wall parameters determine reabsorbate tonicity; tight junction parameters affect the sensitivity of reabsorption to transmural pressure; 3) channel NaCl concentration varies inversely with transmural pressure difference; this concentration variation controls NaCl diffusion through the tight junction; 4) modulation of NaCl diffusion through the tight junction controls the rate of isotonic reabsorption; modulation of water flow can increase sensitivity to transmural pressure; 5) no pressure-induced change in permeability of the tight junction or basement membrane is needed for pressure to modulate reabsorption; and 6) system performance is indifferent to the distribution of active transport sites, to the numerical value of the compliance function, and to the relationship between lumen and cell pressures. |