Abstract

Obesity-related renal lipotoxicity and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are prevalent pathologies with complex aetiologies. One hallmark of renal lipotoxicity is the ectopic accumulation of lipid droplets in kidney podocytes and in proximal tubule cells. Renal lipid droplets are observed in human CKD patients and in high-fat diet (HFD) rodent models, but their precise role remains unclear. Here, we establish a HFD model in Drosophila that recapitulates renal lipid droplets and several other aspects of mammalian CKD. Cell type-specific genetic manipulations show that lipid can overflow from adipose tissue and is taken up by renal cells called nephrocytes. A HFD drives nephrocyte lipid uptake via the multiligand receptor Cubilin (Cubn), leading to the ectopic accumulation of lipid droplets. These nephrocyte lipid droplets correlate with endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondrial deficits, as well as with impaired macromolecular endocytosis, a key conserved function of renal cells. Nephrocyte knockdown of diglyceride acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1), overexpression of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL), and epistasis tests together reveal that fatty acid flux through the lipid droplet triglyceride compartment protects the ER, mitochondria, and endocytosis of renal cells. Strikingly, boosting nephrocyte expression of the lipid droplet resident enzyme ATGL is sufficient to rescue HFD-induced defects in renal endocytosis. Moreover, endocytic rescue requires a conserved mitochondrial regulator, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1α (PGC1α). This study demonstrates that lipid droplet lipolysis counteracts the harmful effects of a HFD via a mitochondrial pathway that protects renal endocytosis. It also provides a genetic strategy for determining whether lipid droplets in different biological contexts function primarily to release beneficial or to sequester toxic lipids.

Highlights

  • In diabetic patients, hyperglycemia triggers complex hemodynamic, metabolic, and inflammatory changes that can lead to a constellation of renal dysfunctions termed “diabetic nephropathy” [1,2]

  • Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) measurements of total fatty acids in larval hemolymph showed that chronic exposure to high-fat diet (HFD) led to a large increase in circulating oleate (C18:1) and myristoleate (C14:1) but not myristate (C14:0) (S1A Fig)

  • HFD is supplemented with oleic acid suggesting that the hemolymph increase of this fatty acid derives directly from the diet

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Summary

Introduction

Hyperglycemia triggers complex hemodynamic, metabolic, and inflammatory changes that can lead to a constellation of renal dysfunctions termed “diabetic nephropathy” [1,2]. Obesity is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes, and it is thought that once adipose. Data and the source data for all main and supporting graphs are provided in S2 Data

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