A virus is a member of the order
Mononegavirales if • its genome is a linear, typically (but not always) nonsegmented, single-stranded, non-infectious
RNA of negative polarity; possesses inverse-complementary 3' and 5' termini; and is not
covalently linked to a
protein; • its genome has the characteristic
gene order
3'-UTR–core protein genes–envelope protein genes–RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene–
5'-UTR (3'-N-P-M-G-L-5') (there are, however, some exceptions); • it produces 5–10 distinct
mRNAs from its genome via polar sequential transcription from a single
promoter located at the 3' end of the genome; mRNAs are
5' capped and
polyadenylated; • it
replicates by synthesizing complete antigenomes; • it forms infectious
helical ribonucleocapsids as the templates for the synthesis of mRNAs, antigenomes, and genomes; • it encodes an
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp, L) that is highly
homologous to those of other mononegaviruses; and/or • it typically (but not always) produces
enveloped virions with a
molecular mass of 300–1,000; an
S20W of 550–>1,045; and a
buoyant density in
CsCl of 1.18–1.22 g/cm3. ==Life cycle==