The development of reoviridae as a family in its own right has been fairly
recent. It began when Albert Sabin suggested that the viruses which had
until then been classified as belonging to the echovirus 10 group be set
apart as a brand new family-- this was in 1959. At this time, these
viruses were not known
to cause any human disease and were known to infect the gastrointestinal
and respiratory cells. As described in the introductory page, the viruses
were dubbed "reo" as an acronym for respiratory enteric
orphan. A little more than a decade later, orbiviruses joined the
reovirus family. Orbiviruses are an arthropod borne genera which were
classified with the reoviruses on the basis of a distinctive, shared
genome: double-stranded, segmented RNA. Rotaviruses joined the family
for the same reason in the late 1970s.
Rotavirus had first been isolated from infant diarrhea by Stanley, Dorman,
and Ponsford in 1951. At that time, it was not known exactly what the
virus was. In 1973 human rotavirus was truly discovered as an infectious
agent causing gastroenteritis when a bowel biopsy of child with the
disease revealed the rotavirus in the stool.
The addition of three more
genera
which do not infect humans-- Cypovirus, Phytoreovirus, and
Fijivirus-- completed the reoviridae family as we know it today. The
viruses found in the reovirus family span the nearly the entire spectrum
of viral infection, infecting mammals, birds, fish, plants, and
insects.