Endornaviridae

Endornaviridae is a family of viruses. Plants, fungi, and oomycetes serve as natural hosts. There are 31 species in this family, assigned to 2 genera (Alphaendornavirus and Betaendornavirus). Members of Alphaendornavirus infect plants, fungi and the oomycete Phytophthora sp., members of Betaendornavirus infect ascomycete fungi.

Endornaviridae
Endornaviridae
Endornaviridae particle. Shown is the replicative form (dsRNA) of the (+)ssRNA virus.
Virus classification Edit this classification
(unranked): Virus
Realm: Riboviria
Kingdom: Orthornavirae
Phylum: Kitrinoviricota
Class: Alsuviricetes
Order: Martellivirales
Family: Endornaviridae
Genera

Alphaendornavirus
Betaendornavirus

Taxonomy

The following genera are assigned to the family:

  • Alphaendornavirus
  • Betaendornavirus

Structure

Endornaviridae 
Transmission electron micrograph of dsRNA molecules of Oryza sativa endornavirus isolate Nipponbare.
Endornaviridae 
Genome maps of Oryza sativa endornavirus isolate Nipponbare (a) and Sclerotinia sclerotiorum endornavirus 1 (b). Numbers indicate genome nucleotide positions.

Linear, single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome of about 14 kb to 17.6 kb. A site specific break (nick) is found in the coding strand about 1 to 2 kb from the 5’ terminus. ViralZone conflicts with ICTV, listing Endornaviridae as dsRNA viruses.

As the Endornaviridae genomes don't include a coat protein (CP) gene, they no true virions are associated with members of this family. For Vicia faba endornavirus, the RNA genome has been associated with some pleomorphic cytoplasmic membrane vesicles.

Life cycle

Viral replication is cytoplasmic. The viral replicative form of the Endornaviridae is dsRNA. Replication follows the double-stranded RNA virus replication model. Double-stranded RNA virus transcription is the method of transcription.

As the replicative dsRNA form is relatively stable, it can be found in comparatively high quantities in host tissues, and therefore is a likely subject of isolations (this is the reason why Endornaviridae often are classified as dsRNA viruses, in contrast to the official ssRNA(+) ICTV classification).

The virus exits the host cell by cell to cell movement.

Plants, fungi, and oomycetes serve as the natural hosts. Transmission routes are pollen associated.

References

Tags:

Endornaviridae TaxonomyEndornaviridae StructureEndornaviridae Life cycleEndornaviridae

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

PremaluElizabeth HolmesJujutsu KaisenNetherlandsFreddie MercuryInvincible (TV series)Masaba GuptaCamila CabelloLinkedInTwitch (service)Chennai Super KingsPremier LeagueMary MallonWorld Wide WebShōgun (2024 miniseries)Amazon (company)VideoEaster Monday2026 FIFA World Cup qualificationMadonnaUEFA Euro 2024Jay-ZRed heiferPoor Things (film)Sex positionBridgertonFIFA Men's World RankingLast SupperAadhaarMoonJason StathamCrocus City Hall attackNapoleonAlbert EinsteinAndrew HubermanThe Eras TourSolar eclipseSurvivor 46Lisa Marie PresleyOnlyFansGeneration ZElvis Presley2026 FIFA World CupSanjiv BhattJordan CameronShirley ChisholmSpatulaWilliam Adams (pilot)Opinion polling for the next United Kingdom general electionDebbie ReynoldsTom HollandAngela RaynerJohn LennonBeyoncéFrancis Scott KeyThe SimpsonsSenegalCherry blossomUFC 300Crew (film)XXX (film series)Katt WilliamsSingaporeAquaman and the Lost KingdomDamsel (2024 film)List of countries by GDP (nominal) per capitaLockheed Martin F-35 Lightning IIList of states and territories of the United StatesKobbie MainooFrankie MunizJimmy CarterRebel WilsonGoogle Maps123MoviesNepalLogan LermanBangladesh🡆 More