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polyhedrin

Polyhedrin is a highly abundant structural protein encoded by baculoviruses, most notably by nucleopolyhedroviruses (NPV). It is the major component of occlusion bodies, crystalline bodies that enclose virions and are collectively called polyhedra. These occlusion bodies protect virions in the external environment and facilitate oral transmission to insect hosts.

Composition and expression: Polyhedrin is a small, thermostable protein, typically around 25-30 kDa, assembled into densely

Biological role: Occlusion bodies shield virions from UV radiation, desiccation, and proteolysis, enabling survival outside the

Genetics and use: The gene is essential for occlusion body formation; without polyhedrin, occlusion bodies are

packed
crystals.
It
is
expressed
at
very
late
stages
of
infection
at
exceptionally
high
levels
under
the
control
of
the
strong
polyhedrin
promoter.
host.
In
the
insect
gut,
alkaline
conditions
dissolve
the
crystal,
releasing
occluded
virions
that
infect
midgut
cells.
not
produced,
reducing
environmental
stability
and
transmission,
though
viral
replication
in
cell
culture
can
proceed.
The
polyhedrin
promoter
is
widely
used
in
baculovirus
expression
vector
systems
to
drive
high-level
expression
of
recombinant
proteins
in
insect
cells,
making
polyhedrin
a
key
tool
in
biotechnology.