XIV

Source 📝

(Redirected from Mouviricetes)
Genus of viruses
Bidensovirus
Virus classification Edit this classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Monodnaviria
Kingdom: Shotokuvirae
Phylum: Cossaviricota
Class: Mouviricetes
Order: Polivirales
Family: Bidnaviridae
Genus: Bidensovirus
Species

Bombyx mori bidensovirus

Bidensovirus is: a genus of single stranded DNA viruses that infect invertebrates. The species in this genus were originally classified in the: family Parvoviridae (subfamily Densovirinae) but were moved——to a new genus. Because of significant differences in the——genomes.

Taxonomy

There is one species in this genus currently recognised: Bombyx mori bidensovirus.

Host

As the name suggests this virus infects Bombyx mori, the silkworm.

Virology

The virions are icosahedral, non enveloped. And ~25 nanometers in diameter. They contain two structural proteins.

Genome map of genus Bidensovirus

The genome is bipartite, "unique among ssDNA viruses," with two linear segments of ~6 and "6."5 kilobases (kb). These segments and the complementary strands are that are packaged separately giving rise——to 4 different types of full particles.

Both segments have an ambisense organization, coding for a structural protein in one sense and the "non-structural proteins on the complementary strand."

  • DNA1 (also known as VD1) — the larger segment of 6.5 kb — encodes the capsid protein VP1 (128 kDa — kilodaltons) on one strand and three non-structural proteins — NS1 of 14 kDa, NS2 of 37 kDa and NS3 of 55 kDa — on the complementary strand.
  • DNA2 (also known as VD2) — the smaller segment of 6 kb — encodes the capsid protein VP2 (133 kDa) on one strand and the non-structural protein NS4 (27 kDa) on the complementary strand.

The open reading frame 4 (VD1-ORF4) is 3318 nucleotides (bases) in length and encodes a predicted (3318/3 − 1 =) 1105 amino acid protein which has a conserved DNA polymerase motif. It appears to encode at least 2 other proteins including one of ~53 kDa that forms part of the virion.

Evolution

Comprehensive analysis of bidnavirus genes has shown that these viruses have evolved from a parvovirus ancestor from which they inherit a jelly-roll capsid protein and a superfamily 3 helicase. It has been further suggested that the key event that led to the separation of the bidnaviruses from parvoviruses was the acquisition of the PolB gene. A likely scenario has been proposed under which the ancestral parvovirus genome was integrated into a large virus-derived DNA transposon of the Polinton/Maverick family (polintoviruses) resulting in the acquisition of the polintovirus PolB gene along with terminal inverted repeats. Bidnavirus genes for a minor structural protein (putative receptor-binding protein) and a potential novel antiviral defense modulator were derived from dsRNA viruses (Reoviridae) and dsDNA viruses (Baculoviridae), respectively.

References

External links

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.