ABSTRACT
Stress granules (SGs) are non-translating mRNP assemblies that form during stress. Herein, we use multiple smFISH probes for specific mRNAs to examine their SG recruitment and spatial organization. We observed that ribosome run-off is required for SG entry with long ORF mRNAs being delayed in SG accumulation, revealing SG transcriptome changes over time. Moreover, mRNAs are ~20X compacted from an expected linear length when translating and compact ~2 fold further in a stepwise manner beginning at the 5’ end during ribosome run-off. Surprisingly, the 5’ and 3’ ends of the examined mRNAs were separated in non-stress conditions, but in non-translating conditions, the ends of AHNAK and DYNC1H1 mRNAs become close, suggesting the closed-loop model of mRNPs preferentially forms on non-translating mRNAs. These results suggest translation inhibition triggers a mRNP reorganization that brings ends closer, which has implications for the regulation of mRNA stability and translation by 3’ UTR elements and the poly(A) tail.