Varicellovirus (var′i-sel′ō-vi′rŭs) is a genus of viruses belonging to subfamily Alphaherpesvirinae, a member of family Herpesviridae. Humans and other mammals serve as natural hosts. There are 19 species in this genus. Diseases associated with this genus include: HHV-3—chickenpox (varicella) and shingles; BoHV-1—infectious bovine rhinotracheitis/infectious pustular vulvovaginitis (IPV); and SuHV-1 (also known as pseudorabies virus)—Aujesky's disease.[2][1]
Varicellovirus | |
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Virus classification | |
(unranked): | Virus |
Realm: | Duplodnaviria |
Kingdom: | Heunggongvirae |
Phylum: | Peploviricota |
Class: | Herviviricetes |
Order: | Herpesvirales |
Family: | Orthoherpesviridae |
Subfamily: | Alphaherpesvirinae |
Genus: | Varicellovirus |
Species[1] | |
See text |
Species
editThe following 20 species are assigned to the genus in ICTV 2022[1]
- Varicellovirus bovinealpha1
- Varicellovirus bovinealpha5
- Varicellovirus bubalinealpha1
- Varicellovirus canidalpha1
- Varicellovirus caprinealpha1
- Varicellovirus cercopithecinealpha9
- Varicellovirus cervidalpha1
- Varicellovirus cervidalpha2
- Varicellovirus cervidalpha3
- Varicellovirus equidalpha1
- Varicellovirus equidalpha3
- Varicellovirus equidalpha4
- Varicellovirus equidalpha6
- Varicellovirus equidalpha8
- Varicellovirus equidalpha9
- Varicellovirus felidalpha1
- Varicellovirus humanalpha3
- Varicellovirus monodontidalpha1
- Varicellovirus phocidalpha1
- Varicellovirus suidalpha1
Structure
editAs with other alphaherpesviruses, the virus particle has a layered structure: Virions consist of an envelope, a tegument, a nucleocapsid, and a core. Tegument is disordered; they do not display a structure and proteins in variable amounts are arranged sometimes in an asymmetric layer located between envelope and capsid. The viral capsid is contained within a spherical envelope which is 120–200 nm in diameter. Surface projections on envelope (viral receptors) are densely dispersed and contain small spikes that evenly dot the surface.
The capsid/nucleocapsid is round with triangulation number T=16 and exhibits icosahedral symmetry. The capsid is isometric and has a diameter of 100–110 nm.[2] The capsid consists of 162 capsomer proteins with a hexagonal base and a hole running halfway down the long axis. The core consists of a fibrillar spool on which the DNA is wrapped. The end of the fibers are anchored to the underside of the capsid shell.[3] It is a double-stranded enveloped DNA virus
Genus | Structure | Symmetry | Capsid | Genomic arrangement | Genomic segmentation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Varicellovirus | Spherical Pleomorphic | T=16 | Enveloped | Linear | Monopartite |
Life cycle
editViral replication is nuclear, and is lysogenic. Entry into the host cell is achieved by attachment of the viral glycoproteins to host receptors, which mediates endocytosis. Replication follows the dsDNA bidirectional replication model. DNA-templated transcription, with some alternative splicing mechanism is the method of transcription. The virus exits the host cell by nuclear egress, and budding.[2] Humans and mammals serve as the natural host.[2] Only one member of the Varicellovirus genus, Varicella zoster virus (HHV-3) infects Homo sapiens (humans).[4]
Genus | Host details | Tissue tropism | Entry details | Release details | Replication site | Assembly site | Transmission |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Varicellovirus | Mammals | Epithelial mucosa | Glycoprotiens | Budding | Nucleus | Nucleus | Aerosol |
References
edit- ^ a b c "Virus Taxonomy: 2022 Release". International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). March 2023. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Viral Zone". ExPASy. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- ^ ICTVdB—The Universal Virus Database, version 4. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1196303
- ^ Davison AJ (2002). "Evolution of the herpesviruses". Vet. Microbiol. 86 (1–2): 69–88. doi:10.1016/s0378-1135(01)00492-8. PMID 11888691.