Herpesvirales contains three families: •
Alloherpesviridae •
Malacoherpesviridae •
Orthoherpesviridae History The
herpesvirus was first isolated from the
blue wildebeest in 1960 by veterinary scientist
Walter Plowright. The genus
Herpesvirus was established in 1971 in the first report of the
International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). This genus consisted of 23 viruses and 4 groups of viruses. In the second ICTV report in 1976 this genus was elevated to family level - the
Herpetoviridae. Because of possible confusion with viruses derived from
reptiles this name was changed in the third report in 1979 to
Herpesviridae. In this report the family
Herpesviridae was divided into 3 subfamilies (
Alphaherpesvirinae,
Betaherpesvirinae and
Gammaherpesvirinae) and 5 unnamed genera: 21 viruses were listed. In 2009 the family
Herpesviridae was elevated to the order
Herpesvirales. This elevation was necessitated by the discovery that the herpesviruses of
fish and
molluscs were only distantly related to those of
birds and
mammals. Two new families were created - the family
Alloherpesviridae which incorporates bony fish and frog viruses and the family
Malacoherpesviridae which contains those of molluscs.
Phylogenetics The only protein with widespread conservation amongst all members of the order, albeit only at the amino-acid level, is the ATPase subunit of the DNA terminase; Phylogenies constructed with the conserved regions of the ATPase subunit of the DNA terminase suggest that
Alloherpesviridae is the basal
clade of the order, and that
Herpesviridae and
Malacoherpesviridae are sister clades. ==References==