The family Caliciviridae (caliciviruses) take their name from the 32 cup-shaped depressions (calix, Lat. = calyx) located on each of the icosahedral quintuple and triple axes. In negatively stained virus preparations, some cup-shaped depressions appear distinct and well defined, while in others these depressions are less pronounced.
The capsid itself consists of 90 dimers of a single viral structural protein, the major structural protein VP1, which in its dimerized form builds up into an icosahedron. Attached to the linear ss(+)RNA, only 1-2 copies are found of a second structural protein(VP2), whose function is poorly understood. Calicivirus virions are small (27 to 40 nm), icosahedral, and nonenveloped. In general, caliciviruses are stable in the environment. Many strains are resistant to inactivation by heat and certain chemicals such as ether, chloroform, and mild detergents(which allows them to survive in the acidic stomach environment and cause gastroenteritis).