Coronaviridae
Coronaviridae is a family of enveloped, positive-strand [RNA virus]es which infect fish, amphibians, birds, and mammals. The group includes the subfamilies Letovirinae, ''Orthocoronavirinae, and Pitovirinae. The members of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae'' are known as coronaviruses.
The viral genome is 26–32 kilobases in length. The particles are typically decorated with large, club- or petal-shaped surface projections, which in electron micrographs of spherical particles create an image reminiscent of the solar corona.
Virology
The 5' and 3' ends of the genome have a cap and poly(A) tract, respectively. The viral envelope, obtained by budding through membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum or Golgi apparatus, invariably contains two virus-specified glycoprotein species, known as the spike and membrane proteins. The spike protein makes up the large surface projections, while the membrane protein is a triple-spanning transmembrane protein. Toroviruses and a select subset of coronaviruses possess, in addition to the peplomers composed of S, a second type of surface projections composed of the hemagglutinin-esterase protein. Another important structural protein is the phosphoprotein coronavirus [nucleocapsid protein|nucleocapsid protein], which is responsible for the helical symmetry of the nucleocapsid that encloses the genomic RNA. The fourth and smallest viral structural protein is known as the envelope protein, thought to be involved in viral budding.Genetic recombination can occur when at least two viral genomes are present in the same infected host cell. RNA recombination appears to be a major driving force in coronavirus evolution. Recombination can determine genetic variability within a CoV species, the capability of a CoV species to jump from one host to another and, infrequently, the emergence of a novel CoV. The exact mechanism of recombination in CoVs is not known, but likely involves template switching during genome replication.
Taxonomy
The family Coronaviridae is organized in 3 subfamilies, 6 genera, 28 sub-genera, and 54 species. Additional species are pending or tentative. The subfamilies and genera of the family are listed hereafter :- Letovirinae
- *Alphaletovirus
- Orthocoronavirinae
- *Alphacoronavirus
- *Betacoronavirus
- *Gammacoronavirus
- *Deltacoronavirus
- Pitovirinae
- *''Alphapironavirus''