Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.

Active fluid circulation and solute transport are essential functions of living organisms, enabling the efficient delivery of oxygen and nutrients to various physiological compartments. Since fluid circulation occurs in a network, the systemic flux and pressure are not simple outcomes of individual...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yufei Wu, Morgan A Benson, Sean X Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-04-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012935
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849720884078575616
author Yufei Wu
Morgan A Benson
Sean X Sun
author_facet Yufei Wu
Morgan A Benson
Sean X Sun
author_sort Yufei Wu
collection DOAJ
description Active fluid circulation and solute transport are essential functions of living organisms, enabling the efficient delivery of oxygen and nutrients to various physiological compartments. Since fluid circulation occurs in a network, the systemic flux and pressure are not simple outcomes of individual components. Rather, they are emergent properties of network elements and network topology. Moreover, consistent pressure and osmolarity gradients are maintained across compartments such as the kidney, interstitium, and blood vessels. The mechanisms by which these gradients and network properties are established and maintained are unanswered questions in systems physiology. Previous studies have shown that epithelial cells are fluid pumps and can actively generate pressure and osmolarity gradients. The polarization and activity of solute transporters in epithelial cells, which drive fluid flux, are influenced by pressure and osmolarity gradients. Therefore, there is an unexplored coupling between pressure and osmolarity in the circulatory network. In this work, we develop a mathematical framework that integrates the influence of pressure and osmolarity on solute transport. We use this model to explore both cellular fluid transport and systemic circulation. Using a simple network featuring the kidney-vascular interface, we show that our model naturally generates pressure and osmolarity gradients across the kidney, vessels and renal interstitium. While the current model uses this interface as an example, the findings can be generalized to other physiological compartments. This model demonstrates how systemic transport properties can depend on cellular properties and, conversely, how cell states are influenced by systemic properties. When epithelial and endothelial pumps are considered together, we predict how pressures at various points in the network depend on the overall osmolarity of the system. The model can be improved by including physiological geometries and expanding solute species, and highlights the interplay of fluid properties with cell function in living organisms.
format Article
id doaj-art-6ea6770efb5646eebc8f3da56940e838
institution DOAJ
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
language English
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS Computational Biology
spelling doaj-art-6ea6770efb5646eebc8f3da56940e8382025-08-20T03:11:51ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582025-04-01214e101293510.1371/journal.pcbi.1012935Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.Yufei WuMorgan A BensonSean X SunActive fluid circulation and solute transport are essential functions of living organisms, enabling the efficient delivery of oxygen and nutrients to various physiological compartments. Since fluid circulation occurs in a network, the systemic flux and pressure are not simple outcomes of individual components. Rather, they are emergent properties of network elements and network topology. Moreover, consistent pressure and osmolarity gradients are maintained across compartments such as the kidney, interstitium, and blood vessels. The mechanisms by which these gradients and network properties are established and maintained are unanswered questions in systems physiology. Previous studies have shown that epithelial cells are fluid pumps and can actively generate pressure and osmolarity gradients. The polarization and activity of solute transporters in epithelial cells, which drive fluid flux, are influenced by pressure and osmolarity gradients. Therefore, there is an unexplored coupling between pressure and osmolarity in the circulatory network. In this work, we develop a mathematical framework that integrates the influence of pressure and osmolarity on solute transport. We use this model to explore both cellular fluid transport and systemic circulation. Using a simple network featuring the kidney-vascular interface, we show that our model naturally generates pressure and osmolarity gradients across the kidney, vessels and renal interstitium. While the current model uses this interface as an example, the findings can be generalized to other physiological compartments. This model demonstrates how systemic transport properties can depend on cellular properties and, conversely, how cell states are influenced by systemic properties. When epithelial and endothelial pumps are considered together, we predict how pressures at various points in the network depend on the overall osmolarity of the system. The model can be improved by including physiological geometries and expanding solute species, and highlights the interplay of fluid properties with cell function in living organisms.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012935
spellingShingle Yufei Wu
Morgan A Benson
Sean X Sun
Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
title_full Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
title_fullStr Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
title_full_unstemmed Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
title_short Fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation.
title_sort fluid and solute transport by cells and a model of systemic circulation
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012935
work_keys_str_mv AT yufeiwu fluidandsolutetransportbycellsandamodelofsystemiccirculation
AT morganabenson fluidandsolutetransportbycellsandamodelofsystemiccirculation
AT seanxsun fluidandsolutetransportbycellsandamodelofsystemiccirculation