Abstract

Wild mammalian species, including bats, constitute the natural reservoir of betacoronavirus (including SARS, MERS, and the deadly SARS-CoV-2). Different hosts or host tissues provide different cellular environments, especially different antiviral and RNA modification activities that can alter RNA modification signatures observed in the viral RNA genome. The zinc finger antiviral protein (ZAP) binds specifically to CpG dinucleotides and recruits other proteins to degrade a variety of viral RNA genomes. Many mammalian RNA viruses have evolved CpG deficiency. Increasing CpG dinucleotides in these low-CpG viral genomes in the presence of ZAP consistently leads to decreased viral replication and virulence. Because ZAP exhibits tissue-specific expression, viruses infecting different tissues are expected to have different CpG signatures, suggesting a means to identify viral tissue-switching events. The author shows that SARS-CoV-2 has the most extreme CpG deficiency in all known betacoronavirus genomes. This suggests that SARS-CoV-2 may have evolved in a new host (or new host tissue) with high ZAP expression. A survey of CpG deficiency in viral genomes identified a virulent canine coronavirus (alphacoronavirus) as possessing the most extreme CpG deficiency, comparable with that observed in SARS-CoV-2. This suggests that the canine tissue infected by the canine coronavirus may provide a cellular environment strongly selecting against CpG. Thus, viral surveys focused on decreasing CpG in viral RNA genomes may provide important clues about the selective environments and viral defenses in the original hosts.

Highlights

  • Coronaviruses (CoVs) evolve in mammalian hosts and carry genomic signatures of their host-specific environment, especially the host-specific antiviral and RNA modification activities

  • zinc finger antiviral protein (ZAP) has two isoforms (ZAP-L and ZAP-S); both participate in initiating antiviral activities but only ZAP-S mediates the return to homeostasis after the antiviral response (Schwerk et al 2019)

  • ZAP acts against retroviruses, such as HIV-1 (Ficarelli et al 2019, 2020), and Echovirus 7 (Odon et al 2019) and Zika virus (Trus et al 2020), both being positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses like CoVs

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Summary

Introduction

Coronaviruses (CoVs) evolve in mammalian hosts and carry genomic signatures of their host-specific environment, especially the host-specific antiviral and RNA modification activities. If a CoV infects a different host tissue with different ZAP abundance, its RNA genome will experience different selection pressure against its CpG. The virus likely evolved in a tissue with high ZAP expression which favors viral genomes with a low ICpG.

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