Dec 31, 2016

DMC & Duke Receive NSF STTR Phase 1 Award

STTR Phase I: Commercialization of Synthetic Metabolic Valves

Award Information

Agency:
National Science Foundation

Branch:
N/A

Contract:
1549624

Agency Tracking Number:
1549624

Amount:
$225,000.00

Phase:
Phase I

Program:
STTR

Solicitation Topic Code:
BT

Solicitation Number:
N/A

Timeline

Solicitation Year:
2015

Award Year:
2016

Award Start Date (Proposal Award Date):
2016-01-01

Award End Date (Contract End Date):
2016-12-31

Small Business Information

DMC Biotechnologies, Inc.
5333 Euclid Ave
Boulder, CO 80303
United States

DUNS:
079513684

HUBZone Owned:
N

Woman Owned:
N

Socially and Economically Disadvantaged:
N

Principal Investigator
Name: Matthew Lipscomb
Phone: (303) 210-2829
Email: [email protected]
Business Contact

Name: Matthew Lipscomb
Phone: (303) 210-2829
Email: [email protected]

Research Institution
Name: Duke University
Contact: Michael D Lynch
Address: 2200 W. Main St, Suite 710
Erwin Square
Durham, NC, 27705
Type: Nonprofit college or university

Abstract

The broader impact/commercial potential of this Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) project will be the development of technology to decouple growth from product formation in microbes used for biomanufacturing. The goal is to address current limitations in the field of metabolic engineering for the production of high value products. Current approaches must balance the complex requirements of both biomass growth and product formation. Furthermore, advancements at screening scale often do not translate to improvements at commercial scale, resulting in long and costly development timelines. This project will deploy a novel technology platform – Synthetic Metabolic Valves (SMV) – to demonstrate the dynamic metabolic control of microbial metabolism for the cost superior production bio-based products. This approach represents a paradigm shift in biochemical engineering. Importantly, this technology enables the standardization of a set of bioprocesses independent of product, greatly simplifying and reducing the costs and risks currently associated with bioprocess R&D. This STTR Phase I project proposes to demonstrate the potential of the Synthetic Metabolic Valve technology to provide an innovative and disruptive approach to rapidly commercialize bio-based products. The SMV technology is enabled by inducible enzyme degradation in combination with gene silencing techniques, utilized in a standardized two-stage bioprocess. Unlike traditional approaches, the SMV technology is generalizable to any production pathway, any microbial host, and enables rapid metabolic engineering strategies for the production of a broad diversity of molecules. Importantly, this technology provides for the generation of robust microbial hosts with unparalleled reproducibility across scale, from micro-well to commercial production. The technology reduces the cost and risk currently associated with production of bio-based products, enabling more rapid and lower-cost product development. To demonstrate this platform technology, this proposal specifically targets production of malonic acid and derivatives at cost superior metrics. Success in this program will demonstrate the feasibility of this technology, which can then be applied to the production of numerous renewable chemicals.
* Information listed above is at the time of submission. *

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