Bac-N-Blue™ Transfection Kit - FAQs

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53 product FAQs found

I cannot grow this white colony in liquid culture. What should I do?

The concentration of gentamicin might be too high. Try lowering the amount to 5 µg/mL and try adding more of the colony to the culture medium.

What has happened when I see blue colonies? How about colonies which are blue in the center and white on the edges?

In the case of a blue colony, the E. coli has the bacmid and the plasmid in it, allowing the cells to survive the selection process. However, because the transposition has not occurred, the LacZ gene is not disrupted. For bulls-eye colonies, this indicates that the transposition took place when the colony was growing. Re-streaking for an isolated clone from the white portion of the mixed colony should yield some colonies where transposition occurred.

I'm getting mostly white/wild-type plaques instead of blue/recombinant plaques. What am I doing wrong?

This is typically an indication of poor homologous recombination. Check the plasmid/linear DNA ratio you used. If there are some blue plaques, however, expand those viruses and check for their protein. In our experience, they are correct, even if they were in relatively low abundance.

I've infected my cells and see large polyhedra in one cell and smaller polyhedra (more numerous) in a neighboring cell. Is this normal?

Yes, cells are infected with wild-type virus individually and will develop polyhedra at different rates until all the cells in the flask are infected. The polyhedra in cells will form in approximately 3-4 days, differing in size and number until they reach their maximum capacity and burst the cell, releasing tiny particles of virus into the medium.

I'm worried that I am not getting plaques. How many days does it take to see plaques and what size are they typically?

Normally, very small white dots show up about 5-7 days and 1 mm plaques show up around day 10. Plaques can vary in size from 1 mm to 4 mm.

I forgot to add Bluo-gal to my plates. Can I add it later?

On the day you intend to pick plaques, make a solution of Bluo-gal in DMSO at 20 mg/mL. Add 50 µL per plate and spread with a glass spreader under sterile conditions. Wait 30-60 min, and your plaques should turn blue.

What might cause plates to turn blue along with blue plaques?

There are a few things that can turn plates blue:

- Too much virus when plating. Try a higher dilution.
- Cells are being singed when plated with hot melted agarose. This lyses the cells and releases lacZ into the agarose, turning it blue. Double-check plating temperatures. If plates are too wet, the blue can diffuse.

After addition of the agarose overlay to my cells, they look like crescents or are granular. What happened?

The agarose overlay was too hot. After addition of the agarose overlay, cells should still be round and healthy.

My agarose overlay is floating. Is this because I did not aspirate the medium completely?

Yes, this is indicative of an aspirating problem on the plaques. The agarose overlays were “floating” because the medium was not completely aspirated from the plates. The plates need to be completely dry before the agarose is placed over the cells, especially when plaques will be picked. To do this, we typically tip the plate slightly and keep going around the rim of the plate with the Pasteur pipette tip, being careful not to disturb the cell monolayer. If any medium pooling at the rims of the plates (they will be small pools) is seen, continue to aspirate. This “floating” agarose overlay problem may also result in wild-type contamination. The wild-type virus is able to migrate to other portions of the plates and contaminate recombinant plaques. Wild-type virus replicates much faster than recombinant virus, and can quickly overwhelm the recombinant virus.

I see what looks like small plaques, but they are too difficult to visualize. What could be the problem?

Too many cells were seeded; we recommend seeding 8 x 10e5 cells per well for a 6-well plate.

I think I've added too much virus. How important is the MOI? What happens if too much virus is used?

An MOI of 5-10 is typically used. If too much virus is added, unfortunately the cells die too soon and the protein expression level goes down.

I'm yielding no plaques from my baculovirus plaque assay. What are the possible causes for this?

The kinetics of infection may be slower than expected. Observe plates until the 8-9th day after infection. If no plaques appear, investigate the following:

- If the cells are not healthy, then poor-quality or no plaques can result. Ideally, cells should be in mid-log phase and have a viability of greater than 90%. Cells should double at least once before infection stops growth. Ensure that the correct amount of cells was used at ~70% confluency.
- The viral replication cycle can be inhibited due to poor nutritional and physical conditions of the cell.
- The temperature of the agarose is also crucial. After overlaying the agarose, the plates should be left untouched for 1 hour for the agarose to completely solidify.
- Excessive condensation during incubation at 27 degrees C can inhibit plaque formation-remove paper towels or open the container containing plates as soon as condensation appears.
- The viral titer is too low: Use a higher viral titer. You may need to re-infect your cells and collect a higher titer of your viral stock.

I performed PCR analysis of recombinant virus from several plaques and am seeing a mix of wild-type and recombinant virus using the Bac-N-Blue expression system. What should I do?

If there is contamination with wild-type virus in all of your samples, take a P1 viral stock and redo the plaque assay. Be sure to select well-spaced, occ- (occlusion body negative) plaques. If you are having difficulty distinguishing a recombinant plaque from a non-recombinant plaque, try using one of the pBlueBac vectors. Recombinant plaques will be blue when chromogenic substrate is incorporated into the medium during the agarose overlay (see page 14 of the manual for more information).

It has been 4 days post-infection, and I do not see signs of viral infection with my Bac-N-Blue expression system. What should I do?

Please compare your cells-only plate to the infected plate. The uninfected cells should appear overgrown when compared to infected cells, as transfection inhibits growth. If this is seen, keep checking the infected cells daily for other signs of infection (nuclear swelling, detachment from the plate, viral budding, and lysis). The kinetics of infection may be slower than expected. If cell growth does not appear to be inhibited, you may consider the following factors:

- How was the DNA prepared? We recommend using a resin-based DNA purification system, such as our PureLink HiPure Plasmid Prep Kits.
- Were cells in log phase? What was their confluency? We recommend that cells be in log phase, 95% viable, and plated at 50-70% confluency for successful transfection.
- What transfection reagent was used? We recommend using Cellfectin II Reagent.


Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I cannot detect any recombinant fusion protein after using the BaculoDirect Expression Kit. What could be the cause for this and what do you suggest I try?

Please check the construction of your entry clone, and ensure that the insert is in frame with the vector. Analyze the recombinant viral DNA by PCR to confirm the correct size and orientation of your insert after the LR reaction. Sequence your PCR product to verify the proper reading frame for expression of the epitope tag.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I'm getting a low-titer P1 viral stock and would like to generate a high-titer stock. What should I do?

To get a high-titer stock, reinfect cells with the P1 stock and generate a P2 high-titer stock. Follow the directions in the BaculoDirect manual on page 18 to generate your P2 stock.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I performed an LR reaction, followed by transfection into Sf9/Sf21 insect cells, but do not see any signs of infection even though it's been 72 hours. What should i do?

Please see our recommendations below:

- Check the LR reaction by PCR analysis prior to transfection into insect cells.
- We recommend using Grace's Insect Cell Culture Medium, Unsupplemented during the transfection experiment instead of serum-free medium, as components in serum-free medium may interfere with transfection.
- Ensure that FBS, supplements, or antibiotics are not included during transfection, as the proteins in these materials can interfere with the Cellfectin II Reagent.
- Use the LR recombination reaction using the pENTR/CAT plasmid as a positive control and Cellfectin II Reagent only (mock transfection) as a negative control.
- Ensure that cells are in the log phase of growth with >95% viability, and the amount of cells are in accordance with the suggestions in the manual.
- Cells may not show signs of viral infection for up to a week depending on transfection efficiency; continue culturing and monitor cells daily for signs of infection.

I see a precipitate in my ganciclovir solution. What can I do?

Warm the ganciclovir solution in a water bath at 37 degrees C for 5-10 min, then vortex for a few minutes. The precipitate should go back into solution.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I am purifying my secreted protein expressed in insect cells with a His-tagged purification column and getting no yield of my protein. Why and what can I do?

Media used to culture insect cells usually have an acidic pH (6.0-6.5) or contain electron-donating groups that can prevent binding of the 6xHis-tagged protein to Ni-NTA. Amino acids such as glutamine, glycine, or histidine are present at significantly higher concentrations in media for growing insect cells than in media for growing mammalian cells, and compete with the 6xHis-tagged protein for binding sites on Ni-NTA matrices. Grace's medium (Thermo Fisher Scientific), for example, contains approximately 10 mM glutamine, 10 mM glycine, and 15 mM histidine.

Dialysis of the medium against a buffer with the appropriate composition and pH (8.0) similar to the lysis buffer recommended for purification under native conditions usually restores optimal binding conditions. Note that depending on the medium used, a white precipitate (probably made up of insoluble salts) can occur, but normally the 6xHis-tagged protein remains in solution. This can be tested by either protein quantitation if using a protein-free medium or by monitoring the amount of 6xHis-tagged protein by western-blot analysis. After centrifugation, 6xHis-tagged protein can be directly purified from the cleared supernatant.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

My viral stock used to work well from my Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system, but after a couple of months, there is much less protein expression. Why is this?

Please review the following possibilities and solutions:

- Viral stock was amplified using high MOI originally: Go back to the lower-passage viral stock and do a low-MOI amplification.
- Did not spin down and get rid of cells when harvesting viral supernatant: Go back to the lower-passage viral stock and do a low-MOI amplification; if this viral stock is P2, this stock can be used in amplification.
- For some genes, the virus can become very unstable: Free the aliquoted P2 viral stock and do one run of amplification after reviving.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I'm getting low protein yield when using the Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system. What are the possible reasons for this?

Low protein yield may occur due to the following reasons:

- Viral stock contains a mixture of recombinant and non-recombinant baculovirus: Perform plaque purification to isolate recombinant baculovirus.
- Baculovirus is not recombinant: Verify transposition by PCR analysis of bacmid DNA using pUC/M13 forward and reverse primers; re-transfect insect cells with new recombinant bacmid DNA.
- Use too low or too high viral titer: Vary the MOI.
- Time of cell harvest is not optimal: perform a time course of expression to determine the optimal time to obtain maximal protein expression.
- Cell growth conditions and medium are not optimal: Optimize cell culture conditions based on the size of your culture vessel and expression conditions; we recommend using Sf-900 II SFM or Sf-900 III SFM for optimal cell growth and protein expression.
- Cell line is not optimal; try other insect cell lines.
- Cells were harvested too late: Do a time-course experiment and harvest cells at different time points.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I don't see any signs of cell infection 72 hours after infection with my P2 viral stock. Why is this?

Check the MOI. It may be low because the titer of the P1 virus is lower than what was estimated.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

Using the Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system, I've transduced my cells but do not see any signs of viral production. It has been 5 days. What happened and what should I do?

Please see the possible reasons and suggestions below:

- Mixture of Cellfectin II Reagent and bacmid was not performed or was not incubated long enough: Mix the Cellfectin II Reagent and bacmid well by tapping or gentle vortexing, and incubate the mixture for 15-45 min.
- Bacmid yield is lower than estimated: Set up an optimization with different amounts of bacmid.
- Bacmid is sheared during purification or freeze/thaw: Verify the integrity of bacmid on a gel.
- Incubation time is not long enough: Incubate mix for 8 hr at 27 degrees C.
- Cells used are of high passages or have passed log-phase growth: For best results, use cells between 8-15 passages; plate cells when they are in log-phase growth.
- Cellfectin II Reagent has been frozen: Purchase a new vial.
- Medium used contains serum: Use unsupplemented Grace's medium in transfection.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

Both transfected cells and Cellfectin II Reagent alone negative control cells are dead within 36 hours. What could cause this?

There are several possibilities:

- Using media containing antibiotics during transfections.
- Plating cells at too low a density: We recommend at least 70% confluence.
- Using cells at too early a passage: We recommend growing cells for at least 5 passages before using them for transfection.
- Contamination because of no pen/strep after the transfection: After 5-8 hr incubation with the transfection mixture, remove the mixture and add antibiotics containing media/well.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Transfection Support Center.

My transfected cells are floating up and look dead, but the Cellfectin II Reagent alone control plate is fine. What could be happening?

This may be due to contamination or cytotoxicity from the bacmid prep. Make sure to include a negative control that is the bacmid only without Cellfectin II Reagent. Additionally, use the PureLink HiPure plasmid prep kit, not the silica-based miniprep kit for bacmid prep.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Transfection Support Center.

Can an old low-titer stock be used to make a high-titer stock?

If this lower-titer stock is a P1 or P2 stock, a viral amplification protocol can be used. If the low-titer stock was once a high-titer stock, but has dropped titer due to age or the stock was propagated many generations, then it may be necessary to regenerate the high-titer stock. If the high titer stock is >P5, then there may be an excessive amount of defective interfering particles that infect cells but do not properly replicate or produce protein. If the existing stock is plated out and a fresh plaque is re-isolated (DIPs do not form plaques), a new high-titer stock can be established.

Can a P3 viral stock be used to generate more viruses? How about a P4 or P5 stock?

Yes, the same protocol used to make your P2 viral stock can be used to make a P3, P4, or P5 viral stock. We don't recommend making the stock higher than P5, as more defective interfering particles will be produced and a decrease in protein expression level will occur.

Can the bacluovirus infect mammalian cells? How about Drosophila cells?

Yes, baculovirus can infect mammalian cells, although only at very high titers. Baculovirus works best in liver cells. However, there is no danger of cross-contamination unless the cells are directly infected with the high-titer stocks. Bacuolvirus can infect Drosophila cells; however, it will not replicate in these cells. The promoters used to drive expression of your gene in a typical baculovirus system are both late promoters and require earlier proteins from the baculovirus genome. Thus, they will not work in S2 cells since the early proteins are not made.

How many cells need to be infected in a 12-well plate with 1 plaque?

Typically, 0.5 x 106 cells per well in 2.5-3 mL is a good starting point. Lysis should begin by day 3. Virus may be harvested and amplified between 3 and 7 days (90% cell death).

I'd like to perform PCR on a plaque, and also make a stock from the same plaque. How do you suggest I do this?

Our R&D team will typically pick a plug and add it to a 12-well dish with 0.5 x 10e6 cells/well and 2.5 mL total volume per well. After approximately 3 days, remove 0.75 mL to make DNA for PCR and keep the remaining medium in an Eppendorf tube as your P1 viral stock. As an aside, it is okay to pick a plaque and store it in Grace's medium.

What is the optimal time for harvesting high-titer virus following infection? What happens if I let the cells go longer?

We recommend harvesting high-titer virus when there is 90% cell lysis. This takes approximately 5-7 days. If the cells go longer, the proteases released from the lysed cells will start to degrade viral surface proteins and result in less infectious virus.

After infecting T25 or T75 flasks with virus, when do you begin to see cell lysis and what percentage of cells will be lysed at certain time points?

This is dependent on how much virus is added. If cells are infected at an MOI of 5, usually cells are infected at 24 hours, and cells begin to lyse at around 65 hours. If less virus is used, this takes longer, and more virus takes less time.

To propagate more recombinant virus stock, what MOI should I use and when should I harvest the virus?

When propagating virus stock, use a low MOI (0.03-0.1) in order to avoid effects of defective interfering particles (DIPs). A low MOI, which ensures no more than 1 virion per cell, prevents the amplification of DIPs. A harvest time based on 15% cell viability is appropriate. NOTE: DIPs are nearly normal virus capsids containing genomes that are defective and are unable to undergo successful replication. While this "particle" is not infectious by itself, it can replicate when co-infected with normal virion, or with some other types of DI particles.

Is there a way to make baculovirus plaques more visible or distinctive?

You can stain the monolayer with neutral red or MTT to make the plaques more visible. Alternatively, you can allow the plates to develop for a few days longer (2-5 days on average) at room temperature to increase the contrast in recombinant plaques. However, the plaques stained with neutral red cannot be used for plaque purification and viral amplification.

What viral titer do you suggest having to infect my cells?

We suggest using a viral stock with a titer of >1 x 10e8 pfu/mL for expression studies.

What is the equation to calculate viral titer? Do you have an example I can use?

Please see the equation below:
pfu/mL = number of plaques (pfu)/dilution factor x mL of inocula
So, if you have a well with viral dilution of 10-8 containing 18 white plaques, the viral titer is calculated as followed:
X pfu/mL = 18 pfu/10-8 x 1 mL
X = 1.8 x 10e9 pfu/mL

Can you outline the main steps of performing a plaque assay, and any suggestions when performing this assay?

Please see the method below for an outline of the main steps of performing a plaque assay:

- Plate cells at 80% confluency in a 6-well plate
- Make a serial dilution of the P1 viral stock (1-10-5) and add to cells
- Incubate for an hour at 27 degrees C
- Mix 1% melted agarose into the medium
- Remove the viral supernatant
- Overlay the cells with the medium containing agarose
- Leave the plates for 2-3 hours for agar to completely solidify
- Incubate plates for 10-14 days
- Count plaques

When performing this assay, we suggest:

- Use cells that are in excellent health, of low passage (10-20) in log-phase growth, and high viability (>95%)
- Check viral stock for sterility (free of contamination)
- Use high-quality, low melting point agarose
- The temperature of the medium with agarose is crucial-too hot, cells will die; but if too cold, it will solidify too quickly
- Wait 2-4 hours before removing the plate after overlay so that the agarose can 100% solidify
- Count plaques on a dilution plate where (1/dilution) x # of plaques = pfu/mL
e.g., if you have 50 plaques on the 10-6 plate, then you have 1(10-6) x 50 = 5 x 10e7 pfu/mL

How do I determine the titer of my viral stock?

We recommend you perform a plaque assay to determine the titer of your viral stock. You may also perform a plaque assay to purify a single viral clone, if desired.

What primers can I use to verify recombinant viruses containing inserts with my Bac-N-Blue expression system?

We recommend designing the forward and reverse primers with the following sequences:

- Forward primer: 5'-TTTACTGTTTTCGTAACAGTTTTG-3' Tm = 62 degrees C
- Reverse primer: 5'-CAACAACGCACAGAATCTAGC-3' Tm = 58 degrees C

These primers flank the polyhedron region and are compatible with all polyhedron promoter-based baculovirus transfer vectors. The forward PCR primer binds from -44 (nt 4049) to -21 (nt 4072) in front of the start of the polyhedron gene, using the nomenclature of O'Reilly et al., 1992. The reverse PCR primer binds at +794 (nt 4886) to +774 (nt 4866) 3' of the polyhedron gene.

Can I use my own baculovirus transfer vector with the Bac-N-Blue DNA?

Yes, any baculovirus transfer vector can be used so long as it contains ORF603 and ORF1629 sequences.

What does "wild-type" refer to and what is the frequency of wild-type plaques I should except when using the Bac-N-Blue expression system?

“Wild-type” refers to uncut Bac-N-Blue DNA that will produce occlusion body positive (occ+) plaques. The frequency of wild-type plaques is less than 20%.

What is the difference between the Bac-N-Blue expression system and the Bac-to-Bac expression system?

In the Bac-N-Blue system, recombination between the transfer vector and the baculovirus DNA occurs in insect cells. The Bac-N-Blue vector is a linearized AcMNPV derivative that contains an incomplete (3') lacZ fragment. The corresponding transfer vector contains a 5' lacZ fragment. Upon homologous recombination, the recombinant Bac-N-Blue baculovirus DNA will have a complete lacZ gene that is under the control of the PETL promoter. Thus, recombinant Bac-N-Blue baculovirus will provide blue plaques in the plaque assay and can be easily identified. In the Bac-to-Bac expression system, recombination or site-specific transposition between transfer and baculovirus DNA occurs in E. coli (DH10Bac). In the Bac-to-Bac expression system, selection of colonies containing recombinant baculovirus DNA occurs in the presence of Luria Agar plates with 50 µg/mL kanamycin (bacmid), 7 µg/mL gentamycin (pFastBac), 10 µg/mL tetracycline (helper plasmid), 100 µg/mL Bluo-gal, and 40 µg/mL IPTG.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

Do I need to include a Kozak sequence for expression of recombinant proteins in insect cells?

While the importance of a Kozak consensus sequence in translation initiation has been demonstrated in mammalian cells, there seems to be some debate as to whether the Kozak rules are as stringent in insect cells. The only way to determine its importance would be a direct comparison of expression of the same protein from different initiation sequences. Even then, the rules for optimal expression of one protein may not hold for another. Here are two references which indicate that a Kozak consensus sequence does not have any effect on efficiency of expression in insect cells:

- Hills D, Crane-Robinson C (1995) Baculovirus expression of human basic fibroblast growth factor from a synthetic gene: role of the Kozak consensus and comparison with bacterial expression.
- Biochim Biophys Acta 1260(1):14-20.
- Ranjan A, Hasnain SE (1995) Influence of codon usage and translational initiation codon context in the AcNPV-based expression system: computer analysis using homologous and heterologous genes. Virus Genes 9(2):149-153.

Is it possible to co-infect insect cells with two different recombinant viruses in order to co-express, for example, two subunits of a protein?

Yes, it is possible. Several five-subunit proteins, such as human replication factor C, have been expressed using recombinant baculovirus. We recommend that a separate high-titer stock (HTS) of each subunit be produced to optimally express the multi-subunit protein. This way, the amount of each subunit expressed can be controlled by varying the multiplicity of infection (MOI) of each subunit's HTS. Please refer to the following articles for more information:

- Chen W and Bhal OP (1991) Recombinant carbohydrate and selnomethionyl variants of human choriogonadotropin. J Biol Chem 266(13):8192-8197.
- Chen WY and Bhal OP (1991) Selenomethionyl analog of recombinant human choriogonadotropin. J Biol Chem 266(15):9355-9358.
- Fabian JR, Kimball SR, Jefferson LS (1998) Reconstitution and purification of eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B) expressed in Sf21 insect cells. Protein Expr Purif 13(1):16-22.

What is the multiplicity of infection, and how can I calculate it?

The MOI, or multiplicity of infection, is the average number of viral particles that infect a single cell in a specific experiment. You can calculate the MOI with the following equation:
MOI (pfu/cell) = [titer (pfu) x viral stock volume (mL) used in inocula] / [cell density (cells/mL) x culture volume (mL)]

Can I scale-up the production of recombinant protein using the baculovirus expression system? If so, what methods are available?

Yes, large-scale expression experiments can be performed. Please see below for different large-scale methods, requirements, added benefits, and references:
- Stirred bioreactor
- Airlift fermentor
- Insect larvae

How can I store my viral stock?

If the medium is serum-free, add serum to 10%. Serum proteins act as substrates for proteases and therefore prevent degradation of viral coat proteins. Store viral stocks at 4 degrees C, and protect from light. Aliquots can be stored at -80 degrees C, but viral titer should be checked before use, as freeze/thaw cycles of the virus can result in a 10- to 100-fold decrease in viral titer.

Do I need to purify my recombinant virus away from an uncut or non-recombinant viral DNA?

Yes. Contamination of your recombinant DNA with uncut occlusion body positive (occ+) DNA will lead to dilution of your recombinant virus over time because, in general, uncut (wild-type, occ+) virus infects and replicates at higher efficiency than recombinant virus. Also, initiating expression studies with a pure, single virus population will ensure reproducible results.

What does viral infection look like in early, late, and very late stages?

Please see the description below of the different stages of viral infection:

Early
- Increased cell diameter-a 25-50% increase in the diameter of the cells may be observed.
- Increased size of cell nuclei-the nuclei may appear to "fill" the cells.

Late
- Cessation of cell growth-cells appear to stop growing when compared to a cell-only control.
- Granular appearance
- Signs of viral budding-vesicular appearance of cells.
- Viral occlusions-few cells will contain occlusion bodies, which appear as refractive crystals in the nucleus of the insect cell.
- Detachment-cells release from the dish or flask.

Very late
- Cell lysis-a few cells may fill with occluded virus, die, and burst, leaving signs of clearing in the monolayer.

What should I look for to indicate a successful transfection in which baculovirus is produced?

Adherent Sf9 cells round up and show a smaller contact point. Infected Sf9 cells in suspension culture round up and look larger when infected.

What are some general suggestions for transfection in baculovirus expression systems?

Please follow the recommendations below:

- Cells should be in excellent health, of their low passages (5-15), in log-phase growth, with viability >95%
- DNA must be of high purity, free of endotoxin
- No antibiotics should be used during transfection
- Cellfectin reagent has to be completely resuspended
- Include controls (media control, DNA control, and transfection reagent control) for comparison and troubleshooting

When should I harvest my protein after I have inoculated my insect cells with recombinant virus?

Peak expression of protein in insect cells is dependent on the multiplicity of infection (MOI), expression time, and the protein being expressed. Guidelines to optimize your system include using an MOI of 5-10 and an expression time of 48-72 hours. Protein expressed at times later than 72 hours may be processed aberrantly, because the large virus load can cause a breakdown of cellular processes.

Is baculovirus good for expressing toxic proteins?

Yes, baculovirus is a good candidate for the problem of expressing toxic proteins (i.e., membrane proteins). The polyhedron promoter does not express at maximal levels until 18-24 hr after infection. The polyhedron promoter is active late in the lytic cycle. That being said, it is minimally active as early as 8 hours, so if the gene is very toxic, there may be a problem. The solution in that case would be to switch to an inducible expression system. Transmembrane proteins can often be difficult to express in any system.