Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules have been linked to translation regulation and disease, but their assembly and regulatory mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we show that the RNA-binding protein G3BP1 preferentially interacts with unfolded RNA, driving the assembly of RNP granule-like condensates that establish RNA-RNA interactions. These RNA-RNA interactions limit the mobility and translatability of sequestered mRNAs and stabilize the condensates. The DEAD-box RNA helicase DDX3X attenuates RNA-RNA interactions inside RNP granule-like condensates, rendering the condensates dynamic and enabling mRNA translation. Importantly, disease-associated and catalytically inactive DDX3X variants fail to resolve such RNA-RNA interactions. Inhibiting DDX3X in cultured cells accelerates RNP granule assembly and delays their disassembly, indicating that RNA-RNA interactions contribute to RNP granule stability in cells. Our findings reveal how RNP granules generate inhibitory RNA-RNA interactions that are modulated by DEAD-box RNA helicases to ensure RNA availability and translatability.
Keywords: DDX3X; DEAD-box helicase; G3BP1; RNA-RNA interactions; RNP granule; biomolecular condensate; stress granule.
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