The New Scope of Virus Taxonomy: Partitioning the Virosphere Into 15 Hierarchical Ranks

The New Scope of Virus Taxonomy: Partitioning the Virosphere Into 15 Hierarchical Ranks

CONSENSUS STATEMENT https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-020-0709-x The new scope of virus taxonomy: partitioning the virosphere into 15 hierarchical ranks International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses Executive Committee* Virus taxonomy emerged as a discipline in the middle of the twentieth century. Traditionally, classification by virus taxonomists has been focussed on the grouping of relatively closely related viruses. However, during the past few years, the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) has recognized that the taxonomy it develops can be usefully extended to include the basal evolutionary relationships among distantly related viruses. Consequently, the ICTV has changed its Code to allow a 15-rank classification hierarchy that closely aligns with the Linnaean taxonomic system and may accommodate the entire spectrum of genetic divergence in the virosphere. The current taxonomies of three human pathogens, Ebola virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and herpes simplex virus 1 are used to illustrate the impact of the expanded rank structure. This new rank hierarchy of virus taxonomy will stimulate further research on virus origins and evolution, and vice versa, and could promote crosstalk with the taxonomies of cellular organisms. iruses were discovered at the end of the nineteenth century but not exclusively, includes genomic properties and sequences as filterable agents causing infectious diseases of plants and (Box 2)15,18. Nowadays, formal virus classification emphasizes com- animals1–5. Subsequently, their pathogenicity and ability parative sequence analyses of conserved genes and proteins, includ- V 6 to undergo rapid evolutionary change has sparked a large body ing gene phylogeny, gene synteny and shared gene content. Other of research, often connected to the so-called ‘microevolution’ of molecular traits are also considered when appropriate19,20. relatively closely related viruses7,8. However, over the last decade, our appreciation of the importance and distribution of viruses Classifications outside of the ICTV taxonomic remit has expanded beyond the original parasitic–pathogen model, and Until recently, the evolutionary relationships between viruses of dif- now virologists recognize the role of viruses in host regulation and ferent families or orders were considered by the ICTV, and by many the maintenance of natural ecosystems9. Shotgun metagenomic in the virology community, as being too distant to be resolved in a sequencing has also revealed the presence of a vast variety of viruses credible classification. Thus, there was little impetus to extend the in diverse environmental samples and in apparently healthy organ- taxonomy rank structure. The result was a taxonomy that, in pro- isms from all divisions of life10–13. found contrast to its cellular counterparts, included many disjointed To understand the true extent of virus genomic diversity—which taxa, the number of which increases with the accelerating discovery may be significantly broader than that of their hosts—and the ori- of novel viruses (exceeding 100 families in 2018). However, clas- gins and forces that shape this diversity, virologists will have to sification efforts continued outside of the official taxonomic frame- systematically rationalize the more distant relationships between work and, over the last few decades, several informal groupings such viruses, ideally reflecting their ‘macroevolution’, and virus taxon- as ‘supergroups’ or ‘superfamilies’ were proposed for subsets of RNA omy should provide an inclusive yet dynamic classification frame- viruses21–23 and DNA viruses24–28. These groupings relate to other- work to reflect these relationships. In contrast to the taxonomies of wise seemingly disparate viruses belonging to different families and cellular organisms, this new virus taxonomic framework will have have a variety of different hosts, genome types and organizations, to accommodate the current view that viruses have multiple ori- and replication mechanisms. Importantly, these groupings have gins (polyphyly) and that their diversity cannot be represented by a relied on distant relationships often associated with structure–func- single virosphere-wide tree14. tion hypotheses (for example, an essential virus protein involved in virus replication or virion morphogenesis), which were then vali- The traditional five-rank structure of virus taxonomy dated in subsequent experimental studies29–31; these provided inde- The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) pendent support for the inferred classifications. oversees the official classification of viruses and nomenclature of Also, before these developments took place, Baltimore had taxa, that is, taxonomy (Box 1)15. In its earliest versions, the ICTV introduced a non-hierarchical classification of viruses which classification of viruses into taxa formally recognized only genera groups viruses into just seven (originally six) classes according to and families but, over time, this classification scheme developed their genome type (double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA, into a five-rank hierarchy of species, genus, subfamily (used rarely), double-stranded RNA, positive-sense RNA, negative-sense RNA, family and order16,17. This five-rank structure matched a section of reverse-transcribing RNA and reverse-transcribing DNA) and its the Linnaean hierarchical structure used in the taxonomies of cel- relation to the synthesis of mRNA32,33. Because of its conceptual lular organisms and remained in place until 2017 (Fig. 1, left). In clarity and functional foundation, this classification system is still addition to changes in the rank hierarchy, the recognition of virus widely used. It complements virus taxonomy by grouping viruses taxa has also evolved over time, from a traditional phenotype-based into meaningful classes at a different scale of virus divergence, albeit characterization process to a multistage process that increasingly, without attempting to evaluate their evolutionary relationships. *A list of authors and their affiliations appears at the end of the paper. 668 NATURE MICROBIOLOGY | VOL 5 | MAY 2020 | 668–674 | www.nature.com/naturemicrobiology NATURE MICROBIOLOGY CONSENSUS STATEMENT Box 1 | The ICTV addressed how best to mirror the complete Linnaean taxonomy system (based on a nest of seven principal or primary ranks: spe- cies, genus, family, order, class, phylum and kingdom), how to allow Te ICTV, which was originally named the International Com- for the hierarchical clustering of virus taxa in higher ranks such as mittee on Nomenclature of Viruses, is a voluntary, largely orders, and whether the Baltimore classes might be adopted as taxa, self-regulating and non-proft global organization. Currently, perhaps at the basal ranks of the taxonomy34. Figuratively speak- membership includes about 150 virologists representing many ing, a taxonomic hierarchy was sought that could accommodate nationalities, with the majority of members elected or appoint- a virosphere-wide tree (or trees) from the roots to the tips of the ed for a fxed term15. Te ICTV is a committee of the Virology branches. Because of its potential impact on the practice of virus Divi sion of the International Union of Microbiological Socie- taxonomy, the EC created a Working Group to consider the mat- ties (IUMS) and is governed by an Executive Committee (EC) ter in more detail. An account of the process undertaken by the that supervises approximately 100 specialized Study Groups. Te Working Group to propose a new taxonomy is outlined in Box 3. Study Group members are chosen by each Study Group Chair, The Working Group concluded that an extended, formal virus who is an ICTV member. Te ICTV is responsible for devel- classification hierarchy should provide 15 ranks, including eight oping the taxonomy, including the ofcial classifcation of all principal (or primary) ranks and seven derivative (or secondary) viruses, viroids and satellites, regardless of their hosts or per- ranks (Fig. 1). The eight principal ranks include four that were ceived importance, as well as the nomenclature of approved already in use (order, family, genus and species) and four that are taxa. Tis taxonomy is in accordance with the Statutes, which new: realm, kingdom, phylum and class, which are all above the form the normative basis of the organization, and the Code, order rank. The class rank in this series is not to be confused with which formalizes the rules on implementing the taxonomy. Te the ‘classes’ described by Baltimore, or the typological attributes ICTV also maintains several web-based resources that serve the of a taxonomic rank35. These new principal ranks cover the entire virology community: scale of virus divergence to include the deepest virus relationships at • ICTV taxonomy database (https://ictv.global/taxonomy/). the basal rank of realm. The large scale of virus divergence encom- Te ICTV database can be accessed using an online taxonomy passed by the 15 ranks is exemplified by the newly created Riboviria browser. Te database is also used to generate a downloadable taxon (a realm) that currently includes all RNA viruses encod- spreadsheet of current virus taxonomy, the Master Species List, ing an RNA-directed RNA polymerase, including viruses of three which is published annually. Baltimore classes (III, IV and V)36. • Online ICTV Report (https://ictv.global/reports/). Te The seven secondary ranks include the previously used sub- online ICTV Report is a developing compendium

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