Clades These viruses fall into four groups based on the RNA polymerase gene. The basal clade appears to be
novirhabdoviruses, which infect fish.
Cytorhabdoviruses and the
nucleorhabdoviruses, which infect plants, are sister clades.
Lyssaviruses form a clade of their own which is more closely related to the land vertebrate and insect clades than to the plant viruses. The remaining viruses form a number of highly branched clades and infect arthropods and land vertebrates.
Proposed classifications An unofficial supergroup – "Dimarhabdovirus" – refers to the genera
Ephemerovirus and
Vesiculovirus. A number of other viruses that have not been classified into genera also belong to this taxon. This supergroup contains the genera with species that replicate in both vertebrate and invertebrate hosts and have biological cycles that involve transmission by haematophagous
dipterans (bloodsucking flies).
Prototypical rhabdoviruses The prototypical and best studied rhabdovirus is
vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus. It is a preferred model system to study the biology of rhabdoviruses, and
mononegaviruses in general. The
mammalian disease
rabies is caused by lyssaviruses, of which several have been identified. Rhabdoviruses are important pathogens of animals and plants. Rhabdoviruses are transmitted to hosts by arthropods, such as aphids, planthoppers, leafhoppers, black flies, sandflies, and mosquitoes. In September 2012, researchers writing in the journal
PLOS Pathogens described a novel species of rhabdovirus, called Bas-Congo virus (BASV), which was discovered in a blood sample from a patient who survived an illness that resembled hemorrhagic fever. In 2015 two novel rhabdoviruses, Ekpoma virus 1 and Ekpoma virus 2, were discovered in samples of blood from two healthy women in southwestern Nigeria. Ekpoma virus 1 and Ekpoma virus 2 appear to replicate well in humans (viral load ranged from ~45,000 - ~4.5 million RNA copies/mL plasma) but did not cause any observable symptoms of disease. Exposure to Ekpoma virus 2 appears to be widespread in certain parts of Nigeria where seroprevalence rates are close to 50%. == Taxonomy ==