Abstract
Autophagy, a critical intracellular degradation and recycling pathway mediated by lysosomes, is essential for maintaining cellular homeostasis through the quality control of proteins and organelles. Our research focused on the role of proximal tubular autophagy in the pathophysiology of aging, obesity, and diabetes. Using a novel method to monitor autophagic flux in kidney tissue, we revealed that age-associated high basal autophagy supports mitochondrial quality control and delays kidney aging. However, an impaired ability to upregulate autophagy under additional stress accelerates kidney aging. In obesity induced by a high-fat diet, lysosomal dysfunction disrupts autophagy, leading to renal lipotoxicity. Although autophagy is initially activated to repair organelle membranes and maintain proximal tubular cell integrity, this demand overwhelms lysosomes, resulting in "autophagic stagnation" characterized by phospholipid accumulation. Similar lysosomal phospholipid accumulation was observed in renal biopsies from elderly and obese patients. We identified TFEB-mediated lysosomal exocytosis as a mechanism to alleviate lipotoxicity by expelling accumulated phospholipids. Therapeutically, interventions such as the SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin and eicosapentaenoic acid restore lysosomal function and autophagic activity. Based on these findings, we propose a novel disease concept, "Obesity-Related Proximal Tubulopathy." This study underscores autophagic stagnation as a key driver of kidney disease progression in aging and obesity, offering insights into the pathophysiology of kidney diseases and providing a foundation for targeted therapeutic strategies.