Abstract The cytosolic molecular chaperone Hsp90 is essential for eukaryotic life 1, 2 . It is involved in multiple branches of proteostasis 2, 3 , and as a molecular capacitor in morphological evolution 4 . Although reduced Hsp90 levels cause phenotypic variations 5, 6 and correlate with aging 7 , whether eukaryotic cells and organisms can tune the basal Hsp90 protein levels to alleviate physiologically accumulated stress is unknown. To begin to explore this question, we investigated whether and how mice adapt to the deletion of three out of four alleles encoding cytosolic Hsp90, one Hsp90β allele being the only remaining one. While the vast majority of such mouse embryos die during gestation, survivors apparently manage to increase their Hsp90β protein to at least wild-type levels. Further mechanistic studies revealed an internal ribosome entry site in the 5’UTR of the Hsp90β mRNA allowing translational reprogramming to compensate for the genetic loss of Hsp90 alleles and in response to stress. We found that the minimum amount of total Hsp90 that is required to support viability of mammalian cells and organisms is 50-70% of what is normally there. Those that fail to maintain a threshold level are subject to accelerated senescence, proteostatic collapse, and ultimately death. Therefore, considering that Hsp90 levels can be reduced ≥100-fold in the unicellular budding yeast, critical threshold levels of Hsp90 have been markedly increased during eukaryotic evolution. The incompressible part of the steady-state levels of Hsp90 may have increased to accommodate the ever-growing complexity of the proteome 8 on the path towards mammals.
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