TRIM21 induces selective autophagy of viruses and bacteria

Published: 29 May 2026| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/cdgx63gd5y.1
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TRIM21 is an exceptionally versatile ubiquitin ligase that can be directed by antibodies to target oligomeric protein scaffolds, viral capsids, and proteopathic aggregates for intracellular degradation. How the cell degrades these typically resistant substrates remains poorly understood. To address this, we used TRIM21 viral restriction to create a genome-wide phenotypic screen for antibody-dependent capsid degradation. We identify an antimicrobial selective macroautophagy pathway in mammalian cells, which we term "antibody-directed xenophagy." We show this mechanism restricts structurally diverse pathogens, including adenovirus and Salmonella. Using quantitative microscopy, we demonstrate that TRIM21 rapidly intercepts antibody-pathogen complexes, leading to ubiquitin ligase activation. Following this, selective autophagy adaptors are recruited and viral cargoes are delivered to lysosomes. This process reduces Salmonella pathology and bacterial tissue invasion in mice. We propose that TRIM21 evolved through competition with pathogens to induce autophagy of diverse and complex substrates, potentially explaining its versatility for targeted protein degradation.

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Protein Degradation, Autophagy, Host Immune Response, Antiviral Immunity, Bacterial Host Response, Ubiquitin Ligase

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