Simple SummaryT-cell intracellular antigen 1 (TIA1) is a DNA/RNA-binding protein best known for its different roles in RNA metabolism. Currently, little is known about the interacting protein partners of TIA1 in control and stress conditions that could shed light on its multiple context-specific molecular functions. Proximity labeling is a technique in which a labeling enzyme, here APEX2, that is fused to the protein of interest, in this case TIA1, marks the protein’s interacting network in living cells, allowing for subsequent ex vivo analysis using protein identification methods such as mass spectrometry. Hereby, combining these two techniques, it was revealed that the TIA1 interactome has very distinct protein partners in control and unstressed cells and that these partners are involved in not only previously identified processes such as splicing, nucleocytoplasmic transport, and different levels of protein translation control, but also in novel ones such as DNA double-strand break repair and mitochondrial metabolism. Overall, these findings provide a more precise definition of TIA1’s function in cells and pave the way to dissect its role in each of these processes.TIA1 is a broadly expressed DNA/RNA binding protein that regulates multiple aspects of RNA metabolism. It is best known for its role in stress granule assembly during the cellular stress response. Three RNA recognition motifs mediate TIA1 functions along with a prion-like domain that supports multivalent protein-protein interactions that are yet poorly characterized. Here, by fusing the enhanced ascorbate peroxidase 2 (APEX2) biotin-labeling enzyme to TIA1 combined with mass spectrometry, the proteins in the immediate vicinity of TIA1 were defined in situ. Eighty-six and 203 protein partners, mostly associated with ribonucleoprotein complexes, were identified in unstressed control and acute stress conditions, respectively. Remarkably, the repertoire of TIA1 protein partners was highly dissimilar between the two cellular states. Under unstressed control conditions, the biological processes associated with the TIA1 interactome were enriched for cytosolic ontologies related to mRNA metabolism, such as translation initiation, nucleocytoplasmic transport, and RNA catabolism, while the protein identities were primarily represented by RNA binding proteins, ribosomal subunits, and eicosanoid regulators. Under acute stress, TIA1-labeled partners displayed a broader subcellular distribution that included the chromosomes and mitochondria. The enriched biological processes included splicing, translation, and protein synthesis regulation, while the molecular function of the proteins was enriched for RNA binding activity, ribosomal subunits, DNA double-strand break repair, and amide metabolism. Altogether, these data highlight the TIA1 spatial environment with its different partners in diverse cellular states and pave the way to dissect TIA1 role in these processes.