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. 2004 Jun 17:1730–1756. doi: 10.1006/rwvi.1999.0277

Table 1.

Virus family descriptors used in virus taxonomy

I Virion properties
A Morphology properties of virions
 1 Size
 2 Shape
 3 Presence or absence of an envelope and peplomers
 4 Capsomeric symmetry and structure
B Physical properties of virions
 1 Molecular mass
 2 Buoyant density
 3 Sedimentation coefficient
 4 pH stability
 5 Thermal stability
 6 Cation (Mg2+, Mn2+) stability
 7 Solvent stability
 8 Detergent stability
 9 Radiation stability
C Properties of genome
 1 Type of nucleic acid DNA or RNA
 2 Strandedness: single-stranded or double-stranded
 3 Linear or circular
 4 Sense: positive, negative or ambisense
 5 Number of segments
 6 Size of genome or genome segments
 7 Presence or absence and type of 5′ terminal cap
 8 Presence or absence of 5′ terminal covalently linked polypeptide
 9 Presence or absence of 3′ terminal poly (A) tract (or other specific tract)
 10 Nucleotide sequence comparisons
D Properties of proteins
 1 Number
 2 Size
 3 Functional activities (especially virion transcriptase, virion reverse transcriptase, virion hemagglutinin, virion neuraminidase, virion fusion protein)
 4 Amino acid sequence comparisons
E Lipids
 1 Presence or absence
 2 Nature
F Carbohydrates
 1 Presence or absence
 2 Nature
II Genome organization and replication
 1 Genome organization
 2 Strategy of replication of nucleic acid
 3 Characteristics of transcription
 4 Characteristics of translation and post-translational processing
 5 Site of accumulation of virion proteins, site of assembly, site of maturation and release
 6 Cytopathology, inclusion body formation
III Antigenic properties
 1 Serological relationships
 2 Mapping epitopes
IV Biological properties
 1 Host range, natural and experimental
 2 Pathogenicity, association with disease
 3 Tissue tropisms, pathology, histopathology
 4 Mode of transmission in nature
 5 Vector relationships
 6 Geographic distribution

Adapted from ICTV guidelines for family descriptions.