Classification of ancient evolutionary connections between viruses made possible with new taxonomy

Publication in Nature Microbiology

The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses () has announced a fundamental change to the way viruses are systematically classified. The new taxonomy system allows scientists to classify viruses in a hierarchical structure similar to that used for cellular organisms, like animals, bacteria and plants. The ICTV describes their decision and its implications in a Consensus Statement in the scientific journal Nature Microbiology.

Taxonomy is a way to group organisms into clusters based on their shared characteristics and evolutionary history. These clusters are assigned to hierarchical ranks that indicate the degree of relatedness of the clusters of organisms. For viruses, there are now fifteen such ranks ranging from species (closely related) to realms (very distantly related). This fifteen-rank viral taxonomy is the result of multi-year deliberations by the ICTV.

Connections

The majority of new ranks were introduced to reveal connections between distantly related viruses which were not considered in the original taxonomy that was almost 30 years old.

Bas Dulith

鈥淯ntil about a decade ago, we only had genomic information from a few thousand viruses; mostly different variants of a handful of viral species known to infect humans, animals, or plants. Advances in metagenomics now allow us to discover thousands of new viruses in the most exotic species, and even discover environmental viruses that infect micro-organisms. This leads to a wealth of new genome data that allows us to see connections between viruses that we could not see based on the limited information we had before. These connections need to be classified if we want scientists to use them鈥, explains co-author Bas Dutilh, assistant professor Bioinformatics at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 and member of the ICTV Executive Committee.

Humans and yeast

The authors believe that the new structure of virus taxonomy will stimulate further research on virus origins and evolution. To illustrate how the new system will benefit the medical community, the authors compare the taxonomies of human Ebola virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus and herpes simplex virus 1. Alexander Gorbalenya, emeritus professor at Leiden 木瓜福利影视 Medical Centre (LUMC) and first author of the study explains: 鈥淭his comparison shows that these viruses, although all capable infecting humans, are vastly different taxonomically on biological grounds. For instance, the human Ebola virus and SARS-CoV are as much distant to each other as would humans and yeast in the taxonomy of cellular life forms.鈥

With the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, there is a lot of attention for viruses. Bas Dutilh explains more about the origins and ancient evolution of viruses in his with NEMOKennislink.

Publication


International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses Executive Committee (with Bas Dutilh, Utrecht 木瓜福利影视)
Nature Microbiology volume 5, pages 668鈥674 (2020). DOI 10.1038/s41564-020-0709-x