| Literature DB >> 35262477 |
Mária Benkő1, Koki Aoki2, Niklas Arnberg3, Andrew J Davison4, Marcela Echavarría5, Michael Hess6, Morris S Jones7, Győző L Kaján1, Adriana E Kajon8, Suresh K Mittal9, Iva I Podgorski10, Carmen San Martín11, Göran Wadell3, Hidemi Watanabe2, Balázs Harrach1.
Abstract
The family Adenoviridae includes non-enveloped viruses with linear dsDNA genomes of 25-48 kb and medium-sized icosahedral capsids. Adenoviruses have been discovered in vertebrates from fish to humans. The family is divided into six genera, each of which is more common in certain animal groups. The outcome of infection may vary from subclinical to lethal disease. This is a summary of the ICTV Report on the family Adenoviridae, which is available at ictv.global/report/adenoviridae.Entities:
Keywords: Adenoviridae; Atadenovirus; Aviadenovirus; ICTV Report; Ichtadenovirus; Mastadenovirus; Siadenovirus; Taxonomy; Testadenovirus
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35262477 PMCID: PMC9176265 DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 5.141
Characteristics of members of the family Adenoviridae
|
Example: |
human adenovirus 5 (AC_000008), species |
|---|---|
|
Virion |
Non-enveloped icosahedral capsid 90 nm in diameter |
|
Genome |
Linear, dsDNA of 25–48 kb with inverted terminal repeats |
|
Replication |
Nuclear |
|
Translation |
From capped, polyadenylated and often spliced transcripts |
|
Host range |
Mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish; host range varies among virus genera |
|
Taxonomy |
Realm |
Fig. 1.Adenovirus virion structure. Left: a model, built from a low-resolution cryo-electron microscopy reconstruction of human adenovirus 5 [9]. Yellow - penton bases, dark blue - fiber protein trimers, modelled from the crystal structure of the distal knob and the filamentous shaft [10], shaded triangle - one facet. Right: schematic of a triangular facet [1].
Fig. 2.Genome organization of the mastadenovirus human adenovirus 5. Coloured arrows depict genes conserved in all genera (black), present in more than one genus (blue) or restricted to mastadenoviruses (red). Rectangles mark the inverted terminal repeats.