Abstract

For 40 years indirect measurements of the glomerular sieving coefficient of albumin yielded very low values. The first direct measurement by 2-photon microscopy by Russo et al (Kidney Int (2007) 71, 504-513) gives values 50-times higher. This demonstrated that relatively large quantities of albumin are normally filtered based on size selectivity alone. Most of this albumin is retrieved and returned to the blood supply. These new discoveries represent a paradigm shift in our understanding of albumin processing by the kidney. They also serve to explain several anomalous aspects of previous studies on glomerular filtration and mechanism of albuminuria and support the fact that glomerular charge selectivity is not a major factor controlling glomerular permselectivity.

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