SpannerPlantLogo140Cambridge website for Synthetic Biology resources
 
 Compiled by Jim Haseloff at the University of Cambridge
This site contains details of recent papers and activity in Synthetic Biology, with particular emphasis on: (i) development of standards in biology and DNA parts, (ii) microbial and (iii) plant systems, (iv) research and teaching in the field at the University of Cambridge, (v) hardware for scientific computing and instrumentation, (vi) tools for scientific productivity and collected miscellany. 
 
Similar to the Cambridge-based Raspberry Pi and OpenLabTools initiatives, we promote the use of low cost and open source tools - in our case for use in biological engineering.
 

SynBio calendar

  • 21 May
    05:00 AM to 05:00 AM

    This meeting will introduce and showcase the many and varied applications of synthetic biology at the molecular, cell, and whole plant level to introduce synthetic biology to a broad UK plant science base.

  • 29 May

    With their provenance as an excellent source of pharmaceutical, neutraceutical and health promoting chemistries, plant natural products are an attractive target for biotechnological development for industrialization

  • 09 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    (Re-)constructing and Re-programming Life This conference will provide an in-depth discussion forum among practitioners of the various fields underlying Synthetic Biology. It aims to pin-point the challenges,

  • 10 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    Algae Innovation Center (AIC) Lolland commenced in 2010 as a project between Green Center, Roskilde University and Aalborg University with the aim of identifying and researching the potentials of using

  • 16 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    The conference will focus on frontiers in biological design, synthetic biology and processing, bringing together the top academic, industrial and governmental researchers from both the East and the West. Specific

  • 23 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    A hands-on Summer Course of advanced Genetic Engineering of Bacteria at the onset of the SynBio era.

  • 25 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    GCAT-alog is freezer management software, optimized for use by synthetic biologists. GCAT-alog is freely available to use though no support other than the user manual is available.The tools can be accessed

  • 29 Jun
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    This week-long summer school provides advanced training in history of the life sciences, a lively international field that offers a long-term perspective on some of the most significant ideas, practices

  • 09 Jul
    12:00 AM to 12:00 AM

    The BioBricks Foundation is pleased to announce The BioBricks Foundation Synthetic Biology 6.0 Conference (SB6.0), which will take place on July 9-11, 2013 at Imperial College, London, UK. This meeting

  • 10 Jul

    SynBioBeta is a forum to bring together synthetic biology startups as well as other stakeholders in the ecosystem. This evening event will be held during the BioBricks Foundation SB6.0 Conference. The

21 May - 30 May
09 Jun - 12 Jun
16 Jun - 07 Jul
25 Jun - 07 Jul
09 Jul - 11 Jul

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Amyris info

Amyris Files to go Public—Biofuels from Microbes

BLOG REPORT FROM GREENTECHMEDIA by ERIC WESOFF: APRIL 16, 2010

see http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/amyris-files-to-go-public-biofuels-from-microbes/

In February, Michael Kanellos suggested that Amyris would be the next greentech startup to file to go public.  It pains me greatly to write that he was correct.

The synthetic biology firm, which has raisedmore than $244 million in private funding from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Khosla Ventures, TPG Biotechnology, Advanced Equities, DAG Ventures, Grupo Cornélio Brennand, Naxos Capital Partners, The Westly Group, Stratus Group, and Temasek Holdings, et al. filed its SEC paperwork today and is looking to raise $100 million. 

 

Here's the link to the S-1.

The company, which was spun out of research conducted at UC Berkeley, feeds sugars to custom microbes which exude hydrocarbons to order which are then converted to fuels or industrial chemicals.   The CEO, John Melo, told Greentech Media in 2008 that $2 per gallon wholesale biodiesel was achievable.   According to the S-1, Melo made $408,333 in salary, $200,000 in bonus, and $221,617 in other compensation for a total of $829,950 in 2009.

The first product out of the company was an artificial version of artemisinin, an antimalaria drug that drew millions in support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.  


The company has been busy.  In December, it paid $82 million to Brazil's São Martinho Group for a 40-percent stake in an ethanol mill project that the parties hope will be operational by 2011 or 2012. The Brazilian company already controls three ethanol plants that make about 600 million liters (158 million gallons) of ethanol per year.   Soon after, it entered into agreements with three other Brazilian companies -- Acucar Guarani, Bunge Limited and Cosan -- to produce ethanol and high-value chemicals.  

Here are some tidbits from the SEC document:

Background

  • The company genetically modifies microorganisms, primarily yeast, and uses them as living factories in established fermentation processes to convert plant-sourced sugars into potentially thousands of target molecules. Their first commercialization efforts have been focused on a molecule called farnesene, the basis for a range of products varying from specialty chemical applications such as detergents, cosmetics, perfumes and industrial lubricants, to transportation fuels such as diesel. 
  • Amyris has developed genetic engineering and screening technologies that enable them to modify the way microorganisms, or microbes, process sugar. By controlling these metabolic pathways, the microbes serve as living factories, or biorefineries, to produce target molecules that the startup intends to commercialize. The platform utilizes proprietary high-throughput processes to create and test as many as 1,000 yeast strains a day in order to select those yeast strains which are most efficient. 
  • Amyris is focusing on Brazilian sugarcane as its primary feedstock.  According to UNICA, the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association, sugarcane is the lowest cost feedstock to produce renewable products at scale and using it enables Amyris to leverage the established Brazilian infrastructure.
  • The firm expects to access feedstock and expand production through a "capital light strategy" with joint ventures with numerous Brazilian sugarcane producers processors.  
  • They plan to commence commercialization starting in 2011 using contract manufacturers, and to have their first capital light production facility, a joint venture with Usina São Martinho, operational in the second quarter of 2012. As they commence commercial production of their initial molecule, farnesene, they expect to target specialty chemical markets. 


Risks

Amyris lists a confidence-sapping set of risks, standard for this type of document, which include:

  • They have a limited operating history and have not generated revenues from the sale of any of their renewable products.  To date, their revenues have consisted of sales of ethanol produced by third parties, funding from third party collaborative research services and government grants.
  • They have no experience producing products at the commercial scale needed for the development of their business, and will not succeed if they cannot effectively scale the technology and processes.
  • The strategy of relying on existing Brazilian sugar and ethanol producers to produce their products makes them substantially dependent on these owners.
  • They may face risks relating to the use of their genetically modified yeast strains including failure to achieve regulatory and public approval.   


Revenue

The company had 2007 sales of $6.1 million, 2008 sales of $13.9 million and 2009 sales of $64.6 million.  The profits from those years were, just kidding -- the company lost $11.7 million, $41.8 million and a whopping $64.4 million in 2009.

Another biotech, company, Codexis, which makes enzymes for fuel production filed its S-1 in December.  Vinod Khosla, an investor in Amyris, has voiced concern that "too many companies have filed and we will get a nanotech moment."  He's "much more concerned about premature IPOs" and cites Codexis as "pretending to be a biofuels company when it is an R&D firm."

How is Amyris any different?

 

(Images from the S-1)