Renal Corpuscle Anatomy

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3–4 minutes

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The Renal Corpuscle

The cortex of the kidney contains the first capillary bed where filtration takes place.  The capillary bed is called the glomerulus.  The glomerulus is wrapped in a double-layer serous membrane. This membrane is similar to the pleura of the lungs. It is also like the pericardium of the heart. 

There is a visceral layer that hugs the capillary and has specialized cells called podocytes.  The outer parietal layer consists of simple squamous cells. There is a distinct capsular space between it and the visceral-wrapped glomerulus.  All of these structures include the glomerulus, the visceral podocytes, the capsular space, and the parietal layer. Together, these are collectively called the renal corpuscle

Histologically, renal corpuscles look like little bull’s eye scattered in the cortex of the kidney.  Only in the cortex.  The capsular space is always easy to identify.  The glomerulus is contained within and the thin layer of simple squamous cells separates the renal corpuscle from surrounding tissues.


The Glomerulus

Glomerulus is the specific name we give the first capillary bed blood experiences in the filtration.  The glomerulus is fed by an afferent arteriole that comes off the cortical radiate artery.  What makes the glomerulus special is that it is drained by an arteriole instead of a venule.  This drainage vessel is called the efferent arteriole and it leads to the second capillary bed that blood experiences. 

Recall from the section of blood vessels that there were three types of capillaries: continuous, fenestrated, and sinusoidal.  Fenestrated capillaries has relatively large intercellular clefts compared to the more common continuous capillaries.  However, they were not as large as intercellular clefts of the sinusoidal capillaries that allow red blood cells to escape.  The glomerulus contains a fenestrated capillary, specifically sized to allow anything smaller than albumin to escape. 

The glomerulus is wrapped in that visceral layer made of specialized cells called podocytes.  The root word podo- mean foot.  These cells wrap around the fenestrated capillary forming a second layer of filtration.  Podocytes have these feet that come together kind of like intertwined fingers.  They form these filtration slits through which anything trying to escape from the capillary bed would have to fit.  Again, anything smaller than the protein albumin would fit. 

Blood enters this capillary bed via the afferent arteriole.  As the blood circulates, things smaller than albumin escape the fenestrated capillary AND the filtration slits of the podocytes.  The substance would end up in the capsular space. This area is drained by this thingy right here. It eventually leads to the renal basin. 


Anatomy of the Filtration Membrane

We will work with this diagram on the bottom left again. We will identify more structures present in the renal corpuscle.  The afferent arteriole brings blood into the glomerulus and the efferent arteriole carries it away.  The glomerulus in these two, more enhanced pictures, has red blood cells in it. Simple squamous endothelial cells surround the capillary. The podocytes in these cross-section diagrams are the blue cells wrapping around the capillary. 

These podocytes and the fenestrated capillaries are crucial structures. Something must move through them to be filtered out of blood. Only then can it enter into the urine.  These two layers of cells are the boundary between what’s in the blood and what is in the renal capsule. This is the filtration membrane. Remember that fluid-fille space bounded by the simple squamous epithelial cells of the parietal layer of the capsule?  Well, remember them now.  This capsule is filled with all kinds of small stuff that escaped from the glomerulus.  This is not urine, it is filtrate.  It still has to go through the second capillary bed of the kidney. 


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