<tr><th bgcolor=violet>Scientific classification <tr><td>

Paramyxovirus

Paramyxoviruses
<tr><td>Domain:<td>Virus <tr><td><td>(-)ssRNA viruses <tr><td>Order:<td>Mononegavirales <tr><td>Family:<td>Paramyxoviridae </table> <tr><th bgcolor=violet>Genera <tr><td> see text </table> Paramyxoviruses are viruses of the Paramyxoviridae family of the Mononegavirales order; they are negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses responsible for a number of human and animal diseases.
Contents
1 Genera

1 Physical structure
2 Genome structure
3 Proteins
4 Pathogenic paramyxoviruses
5 External links

Genera

Physical structure

Virions are enveloped and can be spherical, filamentous or pleomorphic. Fusion proteins and attachment proteins appear as spikes on the virion surface. Matrix proteins inside the envelope stabilise virus structure. The nucleocapsid core is composed of the genomic RNA, nucleocapsid proteins, phosphoproteins and polymerase proteins.

Genome structure

The genome consists of a single segment of negative-sense RNA, 15-19 kilobases in length and containing 6-10 genes. Extracistronic (non-coding) regions include:

Each gene contains transcription start/stop signals at the beginning and end which are transcribed as part of the gene.

Gene sequence within the genome is conserved across the family due to a phenomenon known as transcriptional polarity (see Mononegavirales) in which genes closest to the 3’ end of the genome are transcribed in greater abundance than those towards the 5’ end. This mechanism acts as a form of transcriptional regulation.

The gene sequence is:

Proteins

Pathogenic paramyxoviruses

A number of important human diseases are caused by paramyxoviruses. These include mumps, measles, which caused 745,000 deaths in 2001 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) which is the major cause of bronchiolitis and pneumonia in infants and children.

The parainfluenza viruses are the second most common causes of respiratory tract disease in infants and children. They can cause pneumonia, bronchitis and croup in children and the elderly.

Human metapneumovirus, initially described in about 2001, is also implicated in bronchitis, especially in children.

Paramyxoviruses are also responsible for a range of diseases in other animal species, for example canine distemper, phocine distemper, Newcastle disease and rinderpest. Some paramyxoviruses such as the henipaviruses are zoonotic pathogens, occurring naturally in an animal host, but also able to infect humans.

External links

es:Paramixovirus


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