Kadipiro virus
Kadipiro virus is a member of the virus family Sedoreoviridae. It is an arbovirus and has been isolated from Culex, Anopheles, Armigeres, and Aedes mosquitoes in Indonesia and China. Other members of the genus Seadornavirus have been linked to viral encephalitis.
Characteristics
Kadipiro virus contains 12 segments of double-stranded RNA with a 21,000 base-pair genome. The capsid is icosahedral and naked, though it does temporarily acquire a viral envelope as it buds from a host cell. Sedoreovirinae viruses contain and inner, intermediate and outer capsid. The capsid is 70 nanometers in diameter with capsid spikes and 7 structural proteins.Taxonomy
Kadipiro virus was once classified as Coltivirus JKT-7075. It has been reclassified to the genus Seadornavirus of the family Sedoreoviridae. Due to the dsRNA nature of the viral genome, the virus is classified as a Group III virus under the Baltimore classification system.Since discovery of the Kadipiro virus several strains have been identified. JKT-7075 is now listed as one of those strains.
The genus Seadornavirus contains Banna virus, Kadipiro virus, and Liao ning virus. All three viruses can typically be found where Japanese encephalitis virus and Dengue virus have been reported.