Ranavirus
Ranavirus is a genus of viruses, in the family Iridoviridae. There are five other genera of viruses within the family Iridoviridae, but Ranavirus is the only one that includes viruses that are infectious to amphibians and reptiles. Additionally, it is one of the three genera within this family which infect teleost fishes, along with Lymphocystivirus and Megalocytivirus. The family Iridoviridae is one of the five families of nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses.
Ecological impact
The Ranaviruses, like the Megalocytiviruses, are an emerging group of closely related dsDNA viruses which cause systemic infections in a wide variety of wild and cultured fresh and saltwater fishes. As with Megalocytiviruses, Ranavirus outbreaks are therefore of considerable economic importance in aquaculture, as epizootics can result in moderate fish loss or mass mortality events of cultured fishes. Unlike Megalocytiviruses, however, Ranavirus infections in amphibians have been implicated as a contributing factor in the global decline of amphibian populations. The impact of Ranaviruses on amphibian populations has been compared to the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, the causative agent of chytridiomycosis. In the UK, the severity of disease outbreaks is thought to have increased due to climate change.Etymology
Rana is derived from the Latin for "frog", reflecting the first isolation of a Ranavirus in 1960s from the Northern leopard frog.Evolution
The ranaviruses appear to have evolved from a fish virus which subsequently infected amphibians and reptiles.Hosts
Anuran Hosts
- Wood frogs
- American Bullfrog
Urodelan Hosts
Reptilian Hosts
- Green pythons
- Burmese star tortoises
- Leopard tortoise
- Gopher tortoises
- Mountain lizard
- Eastern box turtles
- Florida box turtles
- Western ornate box turtles
- Spur-thighed tortoises
- Hermann's tortoises
- Egyptian tortoises
- Russian tortoises
- Marginated tortoises
- Red-eared sliders
- Common snapping turtles
- Chinese softshell turtles
- Common flat-tail gecko
- Eastern Fence Lizard
Taxonomy
The family Iridoviridae is divided into six genera which include Chloriridovirus, Iridovirus, Lymphocystivirus, Megalocytivirus, and Ranavirus. The genus Ranavirus is composed of 6 recognized viral species, 3 of which are known to infect amphibians, Bohle iridovirus.
Structure
Ranaviruses are large icosahedral DNA viruses measuring approximately 150 nm in diameter with a large single linear dsDNA genome of roughly 105 kbp which codes for around 100 gene products. The main structural component of the protein capsid is the major capsid protein.Genus | Structure | Symmetry | Capsid | Genomic arrangement | Genomic segmentation |
Ranavirus | Polyhedral | T=133 or 147 | Linear | Monopartite |
Replication
Ranaviral replication is well-studied using the type species for the genus, frog virus 3. Replication of FV3 occurs between 12 and 32 degrees Celsius. Ranaviruses enter the host cell by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Viral particles are uncoated and subsequently move into the cell nucleus, where viral DNA replication begins via a virally encoded DNA polymerase. Viral DNA then abandons the cell nucleus and begins the second stage of DNA replication in the cytoplasm, ultimately forming DNA concatemers. The viral DNA is then packaged via a headful mechanism into infectious virions. The ranavirus genome, like other iridoviral genomes is circularly permuted and exhibits terminally redundant DNA.Genus | Host details | Tissue tropism | Entry details | Release details | Replication site | Assembly site | Transmission |
Ranavirus | Frogs; snakes | - | Cell receptor endocytosis | Lysis; budding | Nucleus | Cytoplasm | Contact |