The
genome is not segmented and contains a single molecule of
circular, negative-sense, single-stranded
DNA. The complete genome is 3000–4000
nucleotides long. They also contain a non-coding region with one to two 80–110 nt sequences that contain high GC content, forming a secondary structure of stems and loops. The genome has
ORFs and a high degree of genetic diversity. Although the mechanism of replication has not been studied heavily, anelloviridae appears to use the rolling circle mechanism where first ssDNA is converted to dsDNA. It requires a host polymerase for replication to occur as the genome itself does not encode for a viral polymerase and, as a result, anelloviridae must replicate inside the cell's nucleus. Anelloviridae also have two main open reading frames, ORF1 and ORF2. They initiate at two different AUG codons. Additional ORFs can be formed as well. These ORFs may overlap partially. ORF2 is thought to either encode a protein with phosphatase activity (TTMVs) or a peptide that suppresses the NF-\kappaB pathways (TTVs). It was seen to have a highly conserved motif in the N-terminal part. ==Clinical==