The virions consist of an envelope, a core, and an internal lipid membrane associated with the inner particle. The virus
capsid is
enveloped and measures 130 nm in diameter, and 200-240 nm in length. Virions are
bacilliform,
ovoid, and
allantoid. They are transmissed by endoparasitic wasps and the host develops a unique cytopathology that resembles apoptosis. Cell infection induces apoptosis and in some species is associated with synthesis of a virus-encoded executioner
caspase and several lipid-metabolizing enzymes. After infection the host cell DNA is degraded, the nucleus fragments and the cell then cleaves into large virion-containing vesicles. Synthesis of viral proteins results in the rescue of developing
apoptotic bodies that are converted into large
vesicles in which virions accumulate and continue to assemble. In infected larvae, millions of these virion-containing vesicles begin to disperse from infected tissues 48–72 hours after infection into the
haemolymph, making it milky white, a characteristic of this disease. The circulation of virions and vesicles in the blood facilitates mechanical transmission by parasitic
wasps. ==Evolution==