posted on 2026-01-05, 14:28authored byRebecca L Youle, Maria Jose Lista, Emma L Brudenell, Bradley Thompson, Clement Bouton, Elizabeth R Morris, Stuart JD Neil, Chad M Swanson, Ian A Taylor
Zinc finger antiviral protein (ZAP) is a cytoplasmic protein central to host innate immunity to viral infection. ZAP has no intrinsic catalytic activity but inhibits viral replication by binding to CpG dinucleotides in cytoplasmic viral RNA and recruiting other factors to inhibit protein synthesis and target the RNA for degradation. KHNYN is a ZAP-binding protein required for ZAP-restriction of CpG-rich viral genomes. It contains an extended diKH, PIN nuclease, and CUElike domain, each of which are required for ZAP restriction of viral replication. Here, we report a structural, enzymological, and virological study of KHNYN's essential PIN nuclease domain. Our crystal structure reveals an extended PIN domain (ex-PIN) containing a conserved N-terminal arm region required for domain stability and an active site tetra-Asp motif, which are both required for antiviral activity. Unlike the weak activity recently reported for the PIN domain, we demonstrate that the KHNYN ex-PIN domain is a highly active Mn2+-dependent single-stranded RNA endonuclease that cleaves with a preference for ApC, ApA, and UpA dinucleotides. These observations extend our view of KHNYN antiviral activity and suggest an unforeseen role for activation by manganese ions in the ZAP-KHNYN antiviral response.
Funding
The Francis Crick Institute
Medical Research Council (Grant ID: MR/S000844/1)
Wellcome Trust Senior Research (Grant ID: WT098049AIA)
Medical Research Council (Grant ID: MR/W018519/1)
National Institute for Health Research
Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: CC2029)
Crick (Grant ID: CC2029, Grant title: Taylor CC2029)