Zinc finger antiviral protein (ZAP)
is a host antiviral
factor
that selectively inhibits the replication of a variety of viruses.
ZAP recognizes the CG-enriched RNA sequences and activates the viral
RNA degradation machinery. In this work, we investigated the dynamics
of a ZAP/RNA complex and computed the energetics of mutations in ZAP
that affect its binding to the viral RNA. The crystal structure of
a mouse-ZAP/RNA complex showed that RNA interacts with the zinc finger
2 (ZF2) and ZF3 domains. However, we found that due to the dynamic
behavior of the single-stranded RNA, the terminal nucleotides C1 and
G2 of RNA change their positions from the ZF3 to the ZF1 domain. Moreover,
the electrostatic interactions between the zinc ions and the viral
RNA provide further stability to the ZAP/RNA complex. We also provide
structural and thermodynamic evidence for seven residue pairs (C1–Arg74,
C1–Arg179, G2–Arg74, U3–Lys76, C4–Lys76,
G5–Arg95, and U6–Glu204) that show favorable ZAP/RNA
interactions, although these interactions were not observed in the
ZAP/RNA crystal structure. Consistent with the observations from the
mouse-ZAP/RNA crystal structure, we found that four residue pairs
(C4–Lys89, C4–Leu90, C4–Tyr108, and G5–Lys107)
maintained stable interactions in MD simulations. Based on experimental
mutagenesis studies and our residue-level interaction analysis, we
chose seven residues (Arg74, Lys76, Lys89, Arg95, Lys107, Tyr108,
and Arg179) for individual alanine mutations. In addition, we studied
mutations in those residues that are only observed in the crystal
structures as interacting with RNA (Tyr98, Glu148, and Arg170). Out
of these 10 mutations, we found that the Ala mutation in each of the
five residues Arg74, Lys76, Lys89, Lys107, and Glu148 significantly
reduced the binding affinity of ZAP to RNA.