Abstract

Papillomaviruses form one genus of the Papovaviridae family. They share common antigenic determinants and their DNAs cross-hybridize under conditions of low stringency. The classification of papillomaviruses is at present based on the host range and the relatedness of the nucleic acids. Isolates are considered independent types if there is less than 50% cross-hybridization in the liquid phase according to a standard protocol. At least 31 human and six bovine papillomavirus types can be differentiated on this basis. The host range does not reflect the natural relationship between the viruses. Subgenera, which differ in biological properties, can be distinguished in outline. Data on overall sequence homology are insufficient for a meaningful classification because two types of virus may be closely related within one genome region and rather heterogeneous in other areas. Some new isolates appear as intermediates between previously well-separated types and complicate the system. A reasonable classification of such types of papillomavirus should be based on homologies between genes that are relevant for differences in the biology of the viruses. A functional mapping of the rather uniformly organized, colinear genomes of papillomaviruses has been started. Genetic studies with bovine papillomavirus type 1 have assigned functions in replication, transformation, gene expression and capsid synthesis to individual open reading frames.

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