Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis (Aug 2024)

Renal tubular epithelial cell quality control mechanisms as therapeutic targets in renal fibrosis

  • Yini Bao,
  • Qiyuan Shan,
  • Keda Lu,
  • Qiao Yang,
  • Ying Liang,
  • Haodan Kuang,
  • Lu Wang,
  • Min Hao,
  • Mengyun Peng,
  • Shuosheng Zhang,
  • Gang Cao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 100933

Abstract

Read online

Renal fibrosis is a devastating consequence of progressive chronic kidney disease, representing a major public health challenge worldwide. The underlying mechanisms in the pathogenesis of renal fibrosis remain unclear, and effective treatments are still lacking. Renal tubular epithelial cells (RTECs) maintain kidney function, and their dysfunction has emerged as a critical contributor to renal fibrosis. Cellular quality control comprises several components, including telomere homeostasis, ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS), autophagy, mitochondrial homeostasis (mitophagy and mitochondrial metabolism), endoplasmic reticulum (ER, unfolded protein response), and lysosomes. Failures in the cellular quality control of RTECs, including DNA, protein, and organelle damage, exert profibrotic functions by leading to senescence, defective autophagy, ER stress, mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction, apoptosis, fibroblast activation, and immune cell recruitment. In this review, we summarize recent advances in understanding the role of quality control components and intercellular crosstalk networks in RTECs, within the context of renal fibrosis.

Keywords