Protoparvovirus
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''Protoparvovirus'' is a genus of
viruses A virus is a submicroscopic infectious agent that replicates only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all life forms, from animals and plants to microorganisms, including bacteria and archaea. Since Dmitri Ivanovsky's 1 ...
in the ''
Parvovirinae ''Parvovirinae'' is a subfamily of viruses in the family ''Parvoviridae''. There are ten genera and 84 species assigned to this subfamily. Taxonomy The following 10 genera are recognized: *'' Amdoparvovirus'' *'' Artiparvovirus'' *'' Aveparvovi ...
'' subfamily of the virus family ''
Parvoviridae Parvoviruses are a family of animal viruses that constitute the family ''Parvoviridae''. They have linear, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) genomes that typically contain two genes encoding for a replication initiator protein, called NS1, and the pr ...
''. Vertebrates serve as natural hosts. There are 15 species in the genus including ''
Rodent protoparvovirus 1 Minute virus of mice (MVM) is the exemplar virus of the species '' Rodent protoparvovirus 1'', in the genus ''Protoparvovirus'' of the ''Parvoviridae'' family of viruses. MVM exists in multiple variant forms including MVMp, which is the prototype ...
'' for which the exemplar virus is
minute virus of mice Minute virus of mice (MVM) is the exemplar virus of the species ''Rodent protoparvovirus 1'', in the genus ''Protoparvovirus'' of the ''Parvoviridae'' family of viruses. MVM exists in multiple variant forms including MVMp, which is the prototype ...
(MVM). This genus also includes
canine parvovirus Canine parvovirus (also referred to as CPV, CPV2, or parvo) is a contagious virus mainly affecting dogs. CPV is highly contagious and is spread from dog to dog by direct or indirect contact with their feces. Vaccines can prevent this infection, ...
(CPV), which causes gastrointestinal tract damage in puppies that is about 80% fatal, and
porcine parvovirus Porcine parvovirus (PPV), a virus in the species ''Ungulate protoparvovirus 1'' of genus ''Protoparvovirus'' in the virus family ''Parvoviridae'', causes reproductive failure of swine characterized by embryonic and fetal infection and death, us ...
(PPV), which is a major cause of fetal death and infertility in pigs. The genus divides phylogenetically into two branches, one that contains many founder members of the family, such as MVM, CPV and PPV, which have been studied in considerable detail, and a second branch occupied exclusively by predicted viruses whose coding sequences were identified recently in the wild using virus discovery approaches, but whose biology remains minimally explored. This second branch currently contains two species whose members infect humans, called ''Primate protoparvovirus 1'' and ''Primate protoparvovirus 3''. Until 2014, the genus was called ''Parvovirus'', but it was renamed to eliminate confusion between members of this genus and members of the entire family ''Parvoviridae''.Cotmore SF, Agbandje-McKenna M, Chiorini JA, Mukha DV, Pintel DJ, Qiu J, Soderlund-Venermo M, Tattersall P, Tijssen P, Gatherer D, Davison AJ. 2014. The family Parvoviridae. Arch. Virol. 159: 1239–47.


Taxonomy

15 species are currently recognized, many containing several named viruses, virus strains, genotypes or serotypes. When applied to
virus A virus is a submicroscopic infectious agent that replicates only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all life forms, from animals and plants to microorganisms, including bacteria and archaea. Since Dmitri Ivanovsky's 1 ...
es, the definition of species is a little unusual. It is simply an abstract taxonomic concept that clusters a selected range of genetic variants, helping to distinguish branches in a phylogenetic lineage, but it is not a physical entity like a virus that can infect an animal or be isolated. If the diversity level used to define a species is set very low, many will effectively contain a single virus, and the virus and species may even be given the same name, resulting in confusion between the two concepts in the literature, and marginalizing the phylogenetic role of the species taxon. To counter this problem, the diversity level now recognized for species in the ''Parvoviridae'' is relatively broad: species are defined as a cluster of similar viruses that encode a particular replication protein, typically called NS1, that is at least 85% identical to the protein encoded by other members of the species. Recognized species in genus ''Protoparvovirus'' include: *'' Carnivore protoparvovirus 1'' (which includes the viruses
canine parvovirus Canine parvovirus (also referred to as CPV, CPV2, or parvo) is a contagious virus mainly affecting dogs. CPV is highly contagious and is spread from dog to dog by direct or indirect contact with their feces. Vaccines can prevent this infection, ...
and
feline parvovirus ''Carnivore protoparvovirus 1'' (CPPV 1) is a species of parvovirus that infects carnivorans. It causes a highly contagious disease in both dogs and cats separately. The disease is generally divided into two major genogroups: CPV-1 containing the ...
); *'' Carnivore protoparvovirus 2'' *'' Carnivore protoparvovirus 3'' *''
Carnivore protoparvovirus 4 A carnivore , or meat-eater (Latin, ''caro'', genitive ''carnis'', meaning meat or "flesh" and ''vorare'' meaning "to devour"), is an animal or plant whose food and energy requirements derive from animal tissues (mainly muscle, fat and other so ...
'' *'' Chiropteran protoparvovirus 1'' (megabat bufavirus 1); *''
Eulipotyphla protoparvovirus 1 Eulipotyphla (, which means "truly fat and blind") is an order of mammals suggested by molecular methods of phylogenetic reconstruction, which includes the laurasiatherian members of the now-invalid polyphyletic order Lipotyphla, but not the afro ...
'' (Mpulungu bufavirus); *'' Primate protoparvovirus 1'' (the human bufaviruses); *'' Primate protoparvovirus 2'' (the monkey virus Wuharv parvovirus 1); *'' Primate protoparvovirus 3'' (cutavirus); *''
Primate protoparvovirus 4 Primates are a diverse order of mammals. They are divided into the strepsirrhines, which include the lemurs, galagos, and lorisids, and the haplorhines, which include the tarsiers and the simians (monkeys and apes, the latter including huma ...
'' *''
Rodent protoparvovirus 1 Minute virus of mice (MVM) is the exemplar virus of the species '' Rodent protoparvovirus 1'', in the genus ''Protoparvovirus'' of the ''Parvoviridae'' family of viruses. MVM exists in multiple variant forms including MVMp, which is the prototype ...
'' (which includes H-1 parvovirus, Kilham rat virus, LuIII virus,
minute virus of mice Minute virus of mice (MVM) is the exemplar virus of the species ''Rodent protoparvovirus 1'', in the genus ''Protoparvovirus'' of the ''Parvoviridae'' family of viruses. MVM exists in multiple variant forms including MVMp, which is the prototype ...
, mouse parvovirus, tumor virus X, and rat minute virus); *'' Rodent protoparvovirus 2'' (rat parvovirus 1) *'' Rodent protoparvovirus 3'' (rat bufavirus SY-2015); *'' Ungulate protoparvovirus 1'' (
porcine parvovirus Porcine parvovirus (PPV), a virus in the species ''Ungulate protoparvovirus 1'' of genus ''Protoparvovirus'' in the virus family ''Parvoviridae'', causes reproductive failure of swine characterized by embryonic and fetal infection and death, us ...
) *'' Ungulate protoparvovirus 2'' (protoparvovirus Zsana/2013/HUN); Protoparvoviruses that infect humans were first discovered in 2012 in the feces of children from Burkina Faso, and named using the siglum bufavirus. Three genotypes of bufaviruses have so far been detected, circulating in Tunisia, Finland and Bhutan A second virus in this genus that infects humans —cutavirus— was initially isolated from the feces of children with diarrhea.Phan TG, Dreno B, da Costa AC, Li L, Orlandi P, Deng X, Kapusinszky B, Siqueira J, Knol AC, Halary F, Dantal J, Alexander KA, Pesavento PA, Delwart E A new protoparvovirus in human fecal samples and cutaneous T cell lymphomas (mycosis fungoides). Virology 496:299–305. doi: 10.1016/j.virol.2016.06.013 A third potential human protoparvovirus —tusavirus 1— has been reported in the feces of a single human, but whether or not it is able to infect humans or was simply ingested remains to be clarified.Phan TG, Sdiri-Loulizi K, Aouni M, Ambert-Balay K, Pothier P, Deng X, Delwart E (2014) New parvovirus in child with unexplained diarrhea, Tunisia. Emerg Infect Dis 20(11):1911–1913. doi: 10.3201/eid2011.140428


Structure

Viruses in genus ''Protoparvovirus'' have non-enveloped protein capsids around 18–26 nm in diameter, which show T=1 icosahedral symmetry. Genomes are single-stranded linear DNA between 4–6kb in length, with small (100–500b) imperfect palindromic sequences at each terminus that fold to form distinctive duplex hairpin telomeres. The capsid is thought to be made up of 60 VP proteins (), both VP1 and VP2.


Genomic organization

The ''Protoparvovirus'' genome has two ORFs. The non-structural ORF (NS) is the "first" on the 5' side, with the structural (VP) on the 3' end. The genome is expressed by extensive
alternative splicing Alternative splicing, or alternative RNA splicing, or differential splicing, is an alternative splicing process during gene expression that allows a single gene to code for multiple proteins. In this process, particular exons of a gene may be ...
. This not only allows for VP to be expressed, but also produces multiple alternatively spliced versions of each ORF, typically called NS1, NS2(P,Y,L), VP1, and VP2. Some examples of annotated proteins from UniProt are: * NS1 of the
Minute virus of mice Minute virus of mice (MVM) is the exemplar virus of the species ''Rodent protoparvovirus 1'', in the genus ''Protoparvovirus'' of the ''Parvoviridae'' family of viruses. MVM exists in multiple variant forms including MVMp, which is the prototype ...
(MVM), * NS2 of MVM, * VP1 of
canine parvovirus Canine parvovirus (also referred to as CPV, CPV2, or parvo) is a contagious virus mainly affecting dogs. CPV is highly contagious and is spread from dog to dog by direct or indirect contact with their feces. Vaccines can prevent this infection, ...
(CPV), * VP2 of CPV,


Life cycle

Viral replication is nuclear. Entry into the host cell is achieved by attachment to host receptors, which mediates clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Replication follows the rolling-hairpin model. In some virus/host cell combinations, progeny virions can be trafficked through the cytoplasm in vesicles and released from the parental host cell prior to cell death, while the remaining virions are released following cell lysis. Vertebrates from 6 orders are currently known to serve as natural hosts. Transmission routes are typically fecal-oral and/or respiratory.


History

Kilham rat virus, isolated in 1959, was the first member of this family of small, linear, single-stranded DNA viruses to be identified. In following years a series of physically similar viruses, including H1, LuIII, minute virus of mice and tumor virus X, were extracted from cells or tissues in routine use in research laboratories and porcine parvovirus, PPV, one of the major causes of reproductive failure in swine, was isolated from infected pigs. In 1971 these viruses were all recognized as part of a taxonomic genus called ''Parvovirus'' in the First Report of the newly created International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) The Second ICTV Report, published in 1976, established the family ''Parvoviridae'', which at that time included three genera, one of which retained the name ''Parvovirus'' and contained all of the aforementioned viruses plus feline panleukopenia virus (now called
feline parvovirus ''Carnivore protoparvovirus 1'' (CPPV 1) is a species of parvovirus that infects carnivorans. It causes a highly contagious disease in both dogs and cats separately. The disease is generally divided into two major genogroups: CPV-1 containing the ...
, abbreviated to FPV), which had been shown to cause epidemics of enteritis, panleukopenia and congenital cerebellar ataxia in domestic cats. In 1978 a virus from the same species as FPV emerged that was able to infect dogs (called
canine parvovirus Canine parvovirus (also referred to as CPV, CPV2, or parvo) is a contagious virus mainly affecting dogs. CPV is highly contagious and is spread from dog to dog by direct or indirect contact with their feces. Vaccines can prevent this infection, ...
or CPV), which rapidly spread globally, causing pandemics of severe intestinal and coronary disease.Hoelzer K, Parrish CR. 2010. The emergence of parvoviruses of carnivores. Vet. Res. 41:39. Genus ''Parvovirus'' continued to accrue new viruses until 2014, when its name was changed to ''Protoparvovirus''.


References


External links


Viralzone: Protoparvovirus

ICTV
{{Taxonbar, from=Q18345118 Parvovirinae Parvoviruses Virus genera