Abstract

Ribosome stalling triggers the ribosome-associated quality control (RQC) pathway, which targets collided ribosomes and leads to subunit dissociation, followed by proteasomal degradation of the nascent peptide. In yeast, RQC is triggered by Hel2-dependent ubiquitination of uS10, followed by subunit dissociation mediated by the RQC-trigger (RQT) complex. In mammals, ZNF598-dependent ubiquitination of collided ribosomes is required for RQC, and activating signal cointegrator 3 (ASCC3), a component of the ASCC complex, facilitates RQC. However, the roles of other components and associated factors of the ASCC complex remain unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the human RQC-trigger (hRQT) complex, an ortholog of the yeast RQT complex, plays crucial roles in RQC. The hRQT complex is composed of ASCC3, ASCC2, and TRIP4, which are orthologs of the RNA helicase Slh1(Rqt2), ubiquitin-binding protein Cue3(Rqt3), and zinc-finger type protein yKR023W(Rqt4), respectively. The ATPase activity of ASCC3 and the ubiquitin-binding activity of ASCC2 are crucial for triggering RQC. Given the proposed function of the RQT complex in yeast, we propose that the hRQT complex recognizes the ubiquitinated stalled ribosome and induces subunit dissociation to facilitate RQC.

Highlights

  • Ribosome stalling triggers the ribosome-associated quality control (RQC) pathway, which targets collided ribosomes and leads to subunit dissociation, followed by proteasomal degradation of the nascent peptide

  • We found that ASCC1 is not an essential component of the human RQCtrigger (hRQT) complex, indicating that the hRQT complex is distinct from both the ASCC complex involved in DNA alkylation repairing and the activating signal cointegrator 1 (ASC-1) complex that serves as a transcriptional coactivator

  • RQC is an indispensable quality control system for guaranteeing accurate gene expression, and the detailed process of RQC is highly conserved: ribosome collision caused by translation arrest triggers RQC8–11, and the collided ribosomes are ubiquitinated by ZNF59810 and dissociated into subunits by an unknown mechanism

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Summary

Introduction

Ribosome stalling triggers the ribosome-associated quality control (RQC) pathway, which targets collided ribosomes and leads to subunit dissociation, followed by proteasomal degradation of the nascent peptide. The ATP-dependent helicase ASCC3 is an ortholog of Slh1(Rqt2), and the ubiquitin-binding protein ASCC2 has significant sequence homology to yeast Cue3(Rqt3), implying the existence of a human RQT (hRQT) complex. We found that ASCC1 is not an essential component of the hRQT complex, indicating that the hRQT complex is distinct from both the ASCC complex involved in DNA alkylation repairing and the ASC-1 complex that serves as a transcriptional coactivator Based on these results, we propose that the newly identified hRQT complex facilitates RQC by dissociation of the ubiquitinated ribosomes into subunits in mammalian cells

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