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orthopoxviruses

Orthopoxviruses are a genus of large, enveloped double‑stranded DNA viruses in the family Poxviridae, subfamily Chordopoxvirinae. The genus includes Variola virus (smallpox), Vaccinia virus, Cowpox virus, Monkeypox virus, Camelpox virus, and Horsepox virus. They share brick‑shaped virions and large genomes of about 170–190 kilobases encoding roughly 200 proteins. Unlike many DNA viruses, orthopoxviruses replicate in the cytoplasm and carry their own transcription machinery.

Structure and life cycle: Virions are complex, brick‑shaped particles that enter cells and form cytoplasmic viral

Disease and public health: Variola virus caused smallpox, eradicated in 1980 after vaccination campaigns. Other orthopoxviruses—monkeypox,

Diagnosis and treatment: Diagnosis relies on PCR and sequencing of viral DNA from lesions or blood; serology

factories.
Gene
expression
occurs
in
early,
intermediate,
and
late
phases.
After
replication,
intracellular
mature
virions
acquire
an
external
envelope
to
become
extracellular
enveloped
virions,
enabling
spread.
Release
occurs
by
cell
lysis
or
exocytosis.
The
natural
host
range
is
broad,
including
many
animals;
humans
can
be
infected
by
several
orthopoxviruses
with
varying
transmission
efficiency.
cowpox,
camelpox—cause
zoonotic
infections
in
humans
with
diverse
severity.
Vaccination
with
vaccinia‑based
vaccines
provides
cross‑protection
against
the
genus.
Lab
handling
of
variola
is
restricted
to
high‑containment
facilities.
Public
health
measures
emphasize
surveillance,
vaccination,
and
post‑exposure
prophylaxis
where
indicated.
supports
diagnosis
in
some
cases.
Most
infections
are
managed
symptomatically.
Antivirals
such
as
tecovirimat
(ST‑246)
have
activity
against
orthopoxviruses
and
are
approved
for
smallpox
and
used
for
mpox
under
regulatory
provisions;
cidofovir
and
brincidofovir
have
been
explored.
Vaccination
remains
the
principal
preventive
measure,
especially
for
at‑risk
populations
and
outbreak
control.