Bac-N-Blue™ Transfection Kit
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Invitrogen™

Bac-N-Blue™ Transfection Kit

The Bac-N-Blue™ Linear DNA was specifically designed for recombination with the pBlueBac vectors and pMelBac. Recombinant viruses have a full-length,Read more
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Catalog number K85501
also known as K855-01
Price (USD)
1,042.00
Each
Add to cart
Price (USD)
1,042.00
Each
Add to cart
The Bac-N-Blue™ Linear DNA was specifically designed for recombination with the pBlueBac vectors and pMelBac. Recombinant viruses have a full-length, functional lacZ gene resulting in the production of
blue plaques. This allows for easy identification and purification. Bac-N-Blue™ DNA can be used with any polyhedrin promoter-based baculovirus transfer vector. Bac-N-Blue™ DNA is linearized at three
sites, one of which is in a gene that is essential for viral propagation (1). This leads to a decrease in non-recombinant virus, making selection and purification of recombinant virus easy. In addition to the viral DNA, the Bac-N-Blue™ Transfection Kit contains Cellfectin™ Reagent for high transfection efficiency.
For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
Specifications
PromoterPolyhedrin
Product TypeInsect Cell Transfection Kit
Protein TagUntagged
Cloning MethodRestriction Enzyme/MCS
Quantity5 transfections
VectorpBlueBac
Product LineBac-N-Blue™
Unit SizeEach
Contents & Storage
The Bac-N-Blue™ Transfection Kit contains five 0.5 μg vials of Bac-NBlue™ linear virus DNA and 125 μl of Cellfectin™ Reagent.
Store at +4°C. All components are guaranteed stable for 6 months when properly stored.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

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.