释义 |
DictionarySeepapovavirusPapovaviridae
Papovaviridae[‚pä·pə·və′vir·ə‚dī] (virology) A family of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-containing viruses characterized by a nonenveloped icosahedral virion containing double-stranded circular DNA that is complexed inside the nucleocapsid to histone proteins of host cell origin. Papovaviridae
Papovaviridae [pah-po´vah-vir″ĭ-de] the papovaviruses, a family of DNA viruses having a virion 40 to 55 nm in diameter with 72 capsomers in skew arrangement. Replication and assembly occur in the nucleus; virions are released by cell destruction. Host range is generally narrow; transmission is by contact or by airborne particles, and many species are oncogenic. There are two genera, Papovavirus and Polyomavirus.Pa·po·va·vir·i·dae (pă-pō'vă-vir'i-dē), A family of small, antigenically distinct viruses that replicate in nuclei of infected cells; most have oncogenic properties. Virions are 45-55 nm in diameter, nonenveloped, and ether resistant; capsids are icosahedral with 72 capsomeres, and they contain double-stranded circular DNA (MW 3-5 × 106). The family includes two genera, Papillomavirus and Polyomavirus. [papilloma + polyoma + vacuolating] Pa·po·va·vir·i·dae (pă-pō'vă-vir'i-dē) A family of small, antigenically distinct viruses that replicate in nuclei of infected cells; most have oncogenic properties. The family includes the genera Papillomavirus and Polyomavirus. [papilloma + polyoma + vacuolating]Pa·po·va·vir·i·dae (pă-pō'vă-vir'i-dē) A family of small antigenically distinct viruses that replicate in nuclei of infected cells; most have oncogenic properties. The family includes the genera Papillomavirus and Polyomavirus. [papilloma + polyoma + vacuolating] |