Picornavirales
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Picornavirales | |
|---|---|
| Picornavirus replication cycle | |
| Virus classification | |
| (unranked): | Virus |
| Realm: | Riboviria |
| Kingdom: | Orthornavirae |
| Phylum: | Pisuviricota |
| Class: | Pisoniviricetes |
| Order: | Picornavirales |
Picornavirales is an order of viruses with vertebrate, invertebrate, protist and plant hosts.[1] The name has a dual etymology.[2] First, picorna- is an acronym for poliovirus, insensitivity to ether, coxsackievirus, orphan virus, rhinovirus, and ribonucleic acid.[2] Secondly, pico-, meaning extremely small, combines with RNA to describe these very small RNA viruses.[2] The order comprises viruses that historically are referred to as picorna-like viruses.
The families within this order share a number of common features:
- The virions are non-enveloped, icosahedral, and about 30 nanometers in diameter.
- The capsid has a "pseudo T=3" structure, and is composed of 60 protomers each made of three similar-sized but nonidentical beta barrels.
- The genome is made of one or a few single-stranded RNA(s) serving directly as mRNA, without overlapping open reading frames.
- The genome has a small protein, VPg, covalently attached to its 5' end, and usually a poly-adenylated 3' end.
- Each genome RNA is translated into polyprotein(s) yielding mature viral proteins through one or several virus-encoded proteinase(s).
- A hallmark of the Picornavirales is a conserved module of sequence domains, Hel-Pro-Pol, which is typical of (from the amino- to the carboxy-end of the polyprotein):
- A helicase belonging to superfamily III
- [the VPg is encoded between these two domains]
- A chymotrypsin-like protease where the catalytic residue is typically a cysteine rather than a serine,
- A polymerase belonging to superfamily I; this conserved module is a hallmark of the Picornavirales
The evolution of picorna-like viruses seems to have antedated the separation of eukaryotes into the extant crown groups.[3]
