Co-translational determination of quaternary structures in chaperone factories

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Abstract

The HSP90/R2TP quaternary chaperone assembles key cellular machines, including the three nuclear RNA polymerases and many non-coding RNPs. Here, we characterized the RNA associated to R2TP and found that it binds many partners co-translationally. Its co-translational interactome further reveals many novel potential clients and identifies clients bound only co-translationally, only post-translationally, or both. For pairs of subunits assembling together and bound co-translationally by R2TP, only a marginal proportion of their mRNAs is co-localized and co-translated. Instead, the HSP90 and R2TP chaperones induce the formation of condensates accumulating client mRNAs and thus favoring co-translational interactions between chaperones and clients. The R2TP then cycles between co- and post-translational steps and this is regulated by ATP: it binds co-translationally in absence of ATP and becomes released from post-translational assembly intermediates by ATP hydrolysis. Assembly of protein complexes is thus initiated early by chaperones and this mechanism, dubbed co-translational chaperone channeling (cha-cha), substitutes for the rarity of co-localized/co-translated mRNAs.

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