List of subviral agents
Subviral agents are pathogenic entities that can cause disease, but lack various fundamental properties of viruses. Subviral agents consist of satellites, viroids, prions, defective interfering particles, viriforms, and, most recently, obelisks.[1][2][3]
| Species | Classification |
|---|---|
| Maize white line mosaic satellite virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Panicum mosaic satellite virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Tobacco mosaic satellite virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Tobacco necrosis satellite virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Macrobrachium satellite virus 1 | Satellite - RNA |
| Nilaparvata lugens commensal X virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Chronic bee-paralysis satellite virus | Satellite - RNA |
| Cafeteriavirus-dependent mavirus | Satellite - DNA |
| Mimivirus-dependent virus Sputnik | Satellite - DNA |
| Mimivirus-dependent virus Zamilon | Satellite - DNA |
| Phaeocystis globosa virus virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Chlorella virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Dishui lake virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Guarani virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Organic Lake virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Qinghai Lake virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Yellowstone Lake virophage | Satellite - DNA |
| Alphasatellite (Family) | Satellite - DNA |
| Tolecusatellitidae (Family) | Satellite - DNA |
| Virusoids (Family) | Satellite - RNA - Uncapsulated |
| Defective interfering particle | Defective interfering particle |
| Avocado sunblotch viroid | Viroid |
| Peach latent mosaic viroid | Viroid |
| Eggplant latent viroid | Viroid |
| Potato spindle tuber viroid | Viroid |
| Hop stunt viroid | Viroid |
| Coconut cadang-cadang viroid | Viroid |
| Apple scar skin viroid | Viroid |
| Coleus blumei viroid 1 | Viroid |
| Polydnaviriformidae | Viriform |
| Rhodogtaviriformidae | Viriform |
| Bartogtaviriformidae, | Viriform |
| Brachygtaviriformida | Viriform |
| Obelisks | Obelisk |
| Prions | Prion |
See also
- List of prions
- Virus classification
References
- ^ Kogay, Roman; Koppenhöfer, Sonja; Beatty, J Thomas; Kuhn, Jens H; Lang, Andrew S; Zhaxybayeva, Olga (14 November 2022). "Formal recognition and classification of gene transfer agents as viriforms". Virus Evolution. 8 (2): veac100. doi:10.1093/ve/veac100. PMC 9662315. PMID 36381234.
- ^ Thompson, Joanna. "Weird 'Obelisks' Found in Human Gut May be Virus-Like Entities". Scientific American. Retrieved 2024-02-28.
- ^ "ICTV". 2022-07-02. Archived from the original on 2022-07-02. Retrieved 2024-02-28.