Abstract
Viruses in the family Closteroviridae have a mono-, bi- or tripartite positive-sense RNA genome of 13–19 kb, and non-enveloped, filamentous particles 650–2200 nm long and 12 nm in diameter. They infect plants, mainly dicots, many of which are fruit crops. This is a summary of the ICTV Report on the family Closteroviridae, which is available at ictv.global/report/closteroviridae.
Keywords: Closteroviridae, ICTV Report, Taxonomy
VIRION
Virions are long, helically constructed filamentous particles; the primary helix has a pitch of 3.4–3.8 nm, about 10 protein subunits per turn and a central hole of 3–4 nm (Table 1). The coat protein (CP) and minor CP (CPm) are the most abundant virion components. CPm encapsidates the 600–700 5′-terminal nucleotides of viral RNA (Fig. 1). The virus-encoded heat shock protein 70 homologue (HSP70h) and the ∼60 kDa protein are also integral to virions; a 20 kDa protein may form the tip of the virion head [1].
Table 1.
Characteristics of members of the family Closteroviridae
|
Typical member: |
citrus tristeza virus (U16304), species Citrus tristeza virus, genus Closterovirus |
|---|---|
|
Virion |
Non-enveloped, filamentous particles 650 to 2200 nm in length and 12 nm in diameter |
|
Genome |
13–19 kb of positive-sense, mono-, bi- or tripartite RNA |
|
Replication |
In association with endoplasmic reticulum-derived membranous vesicles and vesiculated mitochondria |
|
Translation |
Directly from genomic RNAs as large polyproteins or from sub-genomic mRNAs |
|
Host range |
Plants (mainly dicots), transmitted by aphids, whiteflies, mealybugs or soft-scale insects. No seed or pollen transmission |
|
Taxonomy |
Realm Riboviria, four genera, more than 50 species, some unassigned to a genus |
Fig. 1.

Electron micrographs of virions of beet yellows virus (genus Closterovirus) negatively-stained and decorated with an antiserum specific to (a) CP (bare for the CPm tail) and (b) CPm (75 nm tail only). (c) as (b) for four selected particles. Scale bar 300 nm. Reproduced with permission from [6].
GENOME
The genome consists of 1–3 molecules of 5′-capped, linear, positive-sense RNA that lack a 3′-terminal poly(A) or tRNA-like structure (Fig. 2). The genome organization is conserved; the number and relative position of open reading frames (ORFs) can differ. The dual-gene module ORF1a–ORF1b at the 5′-end of genomic RNA encodes replication-associated proteins with conserved domains for a papain-like cysteine protease (l-Pro), methyltransferase (Met), helicase (Hel) and RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRP). Downstream ORFs form a conserved five-gene module encoding a 6K small hydrophobic protein, HSP70h, a ~60 kDa protein, CP and CPm [1]. Genome expression involves proteolytic processing of the polyprotein encoded by ORF1a; a +1 ribosomal frameshift for the expression of the RdRP domain of ORF1b; downstream ORFs expressed via nested 3′ co-terminal sub-genomic mRNAs (sgmRNAs) [2, 3].
Fig. 2.

Closteroviridae: representative genome organisations.
REPLICATION
Replication occurs in the cytoplasm, possibly in association with endoplasmic reticulum-derived membranous vesicles and vesiculated mitochondria induced by the 1a and 1b polyproteins [4]. Essential for replication are a conserved secondary structure at the 5′-untranslated region (UTR) and hairpin structures and a putative pseudoknot at the 3′-UTR of the genomic RNA. The transcription of sgmRNAs is temporally and quantitatively regulated, with each serving as a monocistronic messenger for translation of the corresponding 5′-proximal ORF.
TAXONOMY
The genome of members of the genus Closterovirus is monopartite with CPm encoded upstream of CP. Transmission is by aphids in a semi-persistent manner [5]. Ampelovirus genomes are monopartite and show wide variation in size and organization. Transmission is by pseudococcid mealybugs and soft-scale insects in a semi-persistent manner. Crinivirus genomes are bi-or tripartite. Transmission is by whiteflies in a semi-persistent manner. Viruses in these three genera have a narrow host range and wide distribution; symptoms consist of foliar discoloration and deformation (yellowing, reddening, mottling, rolling), stunting and pitting. Velarivirus genomes are monopartite. Hemipteran vectors have not been identified; there are no apparent symptoms.
RESOURCES
Current ICTV Report on the family Closteroviridae: ictv.global/report/closteroviridae.
Funding information
Production of this summary, the online chapter, and associated resources was funded by a grant from the Wellcome Trust (WT108418AIA).
Acknowledgements
Members of the ICTV Report Consortium are Stuart G. Siddell, Elliot J. Lefkowitz, Andrew J. Davison, Peter Simmonds, Sead Sabanadzovic, Donald B. Smith, Richard J. Orton and F. Murilo Zerbini.
Conflicts of interest
The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.
Footnotes
Abbreviations: CP, coat protein; CPm, minor coat protein; Hel, helicase; HSP70h, heat shock protein 70 homolog; L-Pro, papain-like cysteine protease; Met, methyltransferase; RdRP, RNA-directed RNA polymerase.
References
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