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Active and Passive transport in kidneys. Please help! (1 Viewer)

baby G

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The information i undertand is that, water is absorbed back through osmosis along the length of the tubule (passive transport). And active transport transports or removes ions from blood.

But i dont see how the other things like glucose are absorbed? Is it just absorbed actively like the ions? ... IS it an ion? or are they absorbed dissolved in water through osmosis
 

Survivor39

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baby G said:
The information i undertand is that, water is absorbed back through osmosis along the length of the tubule (passive transport). And active transport transports or removes ions from blood.

But i dont see how the other things like glucose are absorbed? Is it just absorbed actively like the ions? ... IS it an ion? or are they absorbed dissolved in water through osmosis
In the kidney, generally water diffuses back into the capillary via osmosis. Useful ions are actively transported or diffused back in to the blood (Na+). Ions that the body don't need (K+) are actively transported out to the tubule.

Nutrients such as glucose and amino acids are actively transported back to the bloodstream from the filtrate as well, like useful ions. Glucose (uncharged) is not an ion, it's a carbohydrate (C6H12O6)! Glucose is soluble in water.
 

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