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The family Parvoviridae

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The family Parvoviridae. / Cotmore, Susan F.; Agbandje-McKenna, Mavis; Chiorini, John A. et al.
In: Archives of Virology, Vol. 159, No. 5, 05.2014, p. 1239-1247.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

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', Archives of Virology, vol. 159, no. 5, pp. 1239-1247. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1

APA

Cotmore, S. F., Agbandje-McKenna, M., Chiorini, J. A., Mukha, D. V., Pintel, D. J., Qiu, J., Soderlund-Venermo, M., Tattersall, P., Tijssen, P., Gatherer, D., & Davison, A. J. (2014). The family Parvoviridae. Archives of Virology, 159(5), 1239-1247. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1

Vancouver

Cotmore SF, Agbandje-McKenna M, Chiorini JA, Mukha DV, Pintel DJ, Qiu J et al. The family Parvoviridae. Archives of Virology. 2014 May;159(5):1239-1247. Epub 2013 Nov 9. doi: 10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1

Author

Cotmore, Susan F. ; Agbandje-McKenna, Mavis ; Chiorini, John A. et al. / The family Parvoviridae. In: Archives of Virology. 2014 ; Vol. 159, No. 5. pp. 1239-1247.

Bibtex

@article{d79e4b5dc67f483f88c085816724184d,
title = "The family Parvoviridae",
abstract = "A set of proposals to rationalize and extend the taxonomy of the family Parvoviridae is currently under review by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). Viruses in this family infect a wide range of hosts, as reflected by the longstanding division into two subfamilies: the Parvovirinae, which contains viruses that infect vertebrate hosts, and the Densovirinae, encompassing viruses that infect arthropod hosts. Using a modified definition for classification into the family that no longer demands isolation as long as the biological context is strong, but does require a near-complete DNA sequence, 134 new viruses and virus variants were identified. The proposals introduce new species and genera into both subfamilies, resolve one misclassified species, and improve taxonomic clarity by employing a series of systematic changes. These include identifying a precise level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same genus and decreasing the level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same species. These steps will facilitate recognition of the major phylogenetic branches within genera and eliminate the confusion caused by the near-identity of species and viruses. Changes to taxon nomenclature will establish numbered, non-Latinized binomial names for species, indicating genus affiliation and host range rather than recapitulating virus names. Also, affixes will be included in the names of genera to clarify subfamily affiliation and reduce the ambiguity that results from the vernacular use of {"}parvovirus{"} and {"}densovirus{"} to denote multiple taxon levels.",
author = "Cotmore, {Susan F.} and Mavis Agbandje-McKenna and Chiorini, {John A.} and Mukha, {Dmitry V.} and Pintel, {David J.} and Jianming Qiu and Maria Soderlund-Venermo and Peter Tattersall and Peter Tijssen and Derek Gatherer and Davison, {Andrew J.}",
year = "2014",
month = may,
doi = "10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1",
language = "English",
volume = "159",
pages = "1239--1247",
journal = "Archives of Virology",
issn = "0304-8608",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag Wien",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The family Parvoviridae

AU - Cotmore, Susan F.

AU - Agbandje-McKenna, Mavis

AU - Chiorini, John A.

AU - Mukha, Dmitry V.

AU - Pintel, David J.

AU - Qiu, Jianming

AU - Soderlund-Venermo, Maria

AU - Tattersall, Peter

AU - Tijssen, Peter

AU - Gatherer, Derek

AU - Davison, Andrew J.

PY - 2014/5

Y1 - 2014/5

N2 - A set of proposals to rationalize and extend the taxonomy of the family Parvoviridae is currently under review by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). Viruses in this family infect a wide range of hosts, as reflected by the longstanding division into two subfamilies: the Parvovirinae, which contains viruses that infect vertebrate hosts, and the Densovirinae, encompassing viruses that infect arthropod hosts. Using a modified definition for classification into the family that no longer demands isolation as long as the biological context is strong, but does require a near-complete DNA sequence, 134 new viruses and virus variants were identified. The proposals introduce new species and genera into both subfamilies, resolve one misclassified species, and improve taxonomic clarity by employing a series of systematic changes. These include identifying a precise level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same genus and decreasing the level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same species. These steps will facilitate recognition of the major phylogenetic branches within genera and eliminate the confusion caused by the near-identity of species and viruses. Changes to taxon nomenclature will establish numbered, non-Latinized binomial names for species, indicating genus affiliation and host range rather than recapitulating virus names. Also, affixes will be included in the names of genera to clarify subfamily affiliation and reduce the ambiguity that results from the vernacular use of "parvovirus" and "densovirus" to denote multiple taxon levels.

AB - A set of proposals to rationalize and extend the taxonomy of the family Parvoviridae is currently under review by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). Viruses in this family infect a wide range of hosts, as reflected by the longstanding division into two subfamilies: the Parvovirinae, which contains viruses that infect vertebrate hosts, and the Densovirinae, encompassing viruses that infect arthropod hosts. Using a modified definition for classification into the family that no longer demands isolation as long as the biological context is strong, but does require a near-complete DNA sequence, 134 new viruses and virus variants were identified. The proposals introduce new species and genera into both subfamilies, resolve one misclassified species, and improve taxonomic clarity by employing a series of systematic changes. These include identifying a precise level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same genus and decreasing the level of sequence similarity required for viruses to belong to the same species. These steps will facilitate recognition of the major phylogenetic branches within genera and eliminate the confusion caused by the near-identity of species and viruses. Changes to taxon nomenclature will establish numbered, non-Latinized binomial names for species, indicating genus affiliation and host range rather than recapitulating virus names. Also, affixes will be included in the names of genera to clarify subfamily affiliation and reduce the ambiguity that results from the vernacular use of "parvovirus" and "densovirus" to denote multiple taxon levels.

U2 - 10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1

DO - 10.1007/s00705-013-1914-1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24212889

VL - 159

SP - 1239

EP - 1247

JO - Archives of Virology

JF - Archives of Virology

SN - 0304-8608

IS - 5

ER -