Identification of TRIM21 and TRIM14 as Antiviral Factors Against Langat and Zika Viruses.

Tran PT, Kabir MH, Asghar N, Hathaway MR, Hayderi A, Karlsson R, Karlsson A, Taylor T, Melik W, Johansson M

Viruses 17 (5) - [2025-04-29; online 2025-04-29]

Flaviviruses are usually transmitted to humans via mosquito or tick bites, whose infections may lead to severe diseases and fatality. During intracellular infection, they remodel the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane to generate compartments scaffolding the replication complex (RC) where replication of the viral genome takes place. In this study, we purified the ER membrane fraction of virus infected cells to identify the proteins that were enriched during flavivirus infection. We found that tripartite motif-containing proteins (TRIMs) including TRIM38, TRIM21, and TRIM14 were significantly enriched during infection with mosquito-borne (West Nile virus strain Kunjin and Zika virus (ZIKV)) and tick-borne (Langat virus (LGTV)) flaviviruses. Further characterizations showed that TRIM21 and TRIM14 act as restriction factors against ZIKV and LGTV, while TRIM38 hinders ZIKV infection. These TRIMs worked as interferon-stimulated genes to mediate IFN-I response against LGTV and ZIKV infections. Restriction of ZIKV by TRIM14 and TRIM38 coincides with their colocalization with ZIKV NS3. TRIM14-mediated LGTV restriction coincides with its colocalization with LGTV NS3 and NS5 proteins. However, TRIM21 did not colocalize with ZIKV and LGTV NS3 or NS5 protein suggesting its antiviral activity is not dependent on direct targeting the viral enzyme. Finally, we demonstrated that overexpression of TRIM21 and TRIM14 restricted LGTV replication.

Glycoproteomics and MS Proteomics [Service]

PubMed 40431659

DOI 10.3390/v17050644

Crossref 10.3390/v17050644

pmc: PMC12116035
pii: v17050644


Publications 9.5.1