Abstract

The Baculoviral Expression Vector System (BEVS) is the most commonly used method for high expression of recombinant protein in insect cells. Nevertheless, expression of some target proteins-especially those entering the secretory pathway- provides a severe challenge for the baculovirus infected insect cells, due to the reorganisation of intracellular compounds upon viral infection. Therefore, alternative strategies for recombinant protein production in insect cells like transient plasmid-based expression or stable expression cell lines are becoming more popular. However, the major bottleneck of these systems is the lack of strong endogenous polymerase II dependent promoters, as the strong baculoviral p10 and polH promoters used in BEVS are only functional in presence of the viral transcription machinery during the late phase of infection. In this work we present a draft genome and a transcriptome analysis of Sf21 cells for the identification of the first known endogenous Spodoptera frugiperda promoters. Therefore, putative promoter sequences were identified and selected because of high mRNA level or in analogy to other strong promoters in other eukaryotic organism. The chosen endogenous Sf21 promoters were compared to early viral promoters for their efficiency to trigger eGFP expression using transient plasmid based transfection in a BioLector Microfermentation system. Furthermore, promoter activity was not only shown in Sf21 cells but also in Hi5 cells. The novel endogenous Sf21 promoters were ranked according to their activity and expand the small pool of available promoters for stable insect cell line development and transient plasmid expression in insect cells. The best promoter was used to improve plasmid based transient transfection in insect cells substantially.

Highlights

  • The Baculoviral Expression Vector System (BEVS) is used since its development in the early 1980s [1] for high expression of recombinant protein in insect cells

  • Transcripts were ranked according to their abundance using the RSEM value

  • Open reading frames were analysed by BLAST+ comparison, identifying more than 11000 different proteins

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Summary

Introduction

The Baculoviral Expression Vector System (BEVS) is used since its development in the early 1980s [1] for high expression of recombinant protein in insect cells. It is very well established and in most cases leads to high yields of target protein [2,3]. Alternative systems for protein production in insect cells like stable expression in cell lines [2] or plasmid based transient transfection [6] are becoming more popular. Stable expression in insect cells has already been reported for almost two decades [7], but was recently improved by establishing the Recombinase Mediated Cassette Exchange (RMCE) system in Sf9 and Hi5 cell lines [8]. Shen et al [9] optimized the conditions for transient transfection using polyethyleneimine (PEI) in insect cells

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