Abstract
Mitochondrial degradation by mitophagy is essential to maintain cell metabolism; dysregulation can result in the accumulation of damaged mitochondria. Although the Rab family of small GTPase proteins are involved with vesicular trafficking in the endocytic and biosynthetic pathways, Rab-GTPases also have a role in mitochondrial integrity. However, a role for Rab14, a trans-Golgi network (TGN)-endosomal Rab-GTPase in mitophagy has not been described. In cells knocked down for Rab14, mitochondria acquire an elongated morphology and increased levels of mitochondrial proteins, whereas overexpression of Rab14 decreased these proteins. Furthermore, mito-Keima assays show increased mitophagy upon Rab14 overexpression. Rab14-induced mitophagy is dependent on Parkin expression, as well as TBK1 and PI3K activity, placing it in the Parkin-dependent mitophagy pathway. 3D-reconstruction shows contact site formation between Rab14 and mitochondria, and inhibition of the TGN kinase PI(4)KIIIβ decreases Rab14-mitochondria contact sites and prevents Rab14-mediated mitophagy, suggesting that TGN-derived Rab14 vesicles mediate mitophagy. These results suggest that Rab14 promotes mitophagy and plays an essential role in modulating cellular metabolism.
