Review Article

Use of Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes in Baculovirus Research and Recombinant Protein Expression: Current Trends and Future Perspectives

Figure 1

Key stages in the infection cycle of AcMNPV. (A) Infection is initiated by the ingestion of a virus occlusion body (OB). This consists of multiple virus nucleocapsids surrounded by a single lipid envelope (ODV) embedded in a protein matrix formed by the virally encoded polyhedrin protein. (B) The occlusion body is dissolved by the alkaline environment of the insect mid-gut, releasing ODV which initiate a primary infection in the midgut epithelial cells. (C) Virus enters cells and replicates in the nucleus. Two different forms of infectious virus are produced in infected cells. Budded virus (BV) is released at the cell surface and mediates systemic infection of the insect via the tracheal system, and ODV remains embedded in occlusion bodies. (D) Late stages of virus infection trigger liquefaction of the host, releasing the environmentally stable proteinaceous occlusion bodies. Polyhedrin protein is nonessential for the infection of cells in continuous culture in the laboratory and its high level of synthesis makes its promoter ideal for the high-level production of recombinant protein.
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