Abstract
Diabetic nephropathy (DN) remains the leading cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide, with proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTECs) playing a central role in its pathogenesis. Under hyperglycemic conditions, PTECs drive a pathological triad of inflammation, apoptosis, and fibrosis. Recent advances reveal that these processes interact synergistically to form a self-perpetuating vicious cycle, rather than operating in isolation. This review systematically elucidates the molecular mechanisms underlying this crosstalk in PTECs. Hyperglycemia induces reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction, advanced glycation end products (AGEs) accumulation, and endoplasmic reticulum stress (ERS), which collectively activate key inflammatory pathways (NF-κB, NLRP3, cGAS-STING). The resulting inflammatory milieu triggers apoptosis via death receptor and mitochondrial pathways, while apoptotic cells release damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) that further amplify inflammation. Concurrently, fibrogenic signaling (TGF-β1/Smad, Hippo-YAP/TAZ) promotes epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition. Crucially, the resulting fibrotic microenvironment reciprocally exacerbates inflammation and apoptosis through mechanical stress and hypoxia. Quantitative data from preclinical and clinical studies are integrated to underscore the magnitude of these effects. Current therapeutic strategies are evolving toward multi-target interventions against this pathological network. We contrast the paradigm of monotargeted agents (e.g., Finerenone, SGLT2 inhibitors), which offer high specificity, with that of multi-targeted natural product-based formulations (e.g., Huangkui capsule, Astragaloside IV), which provide synergistic multi-pathway modulation. Emerging approaches (metabolic reprogramming, epigenetic regulation, mechanobiological signaling) hold promise for reversing fibrosis. Future directions include leveraging single-cell technologies to decipher PTEC heterogeneity and developing kidney-targeted drug delivery systems. We conclude that disrupting the inflammation-apoptosis-fibrosis vicious cycle in PTECs is central to developing next-generation therapies for DN.