Gevo wins US patents for bio-isobutanol production
Advanced biofuels firm Gevo received two patents from the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) on technologies that enable the low-cost, high-yield production of bio-based isobutanol.
Gevos PDC patent focuses on converting an ethanol producing yeast into an isobutanol producing one. This significant discovery virtually eliminates ethanol production in yeast and enables Gevos yeast to survive and thrive by producing isobutanol at high yields.
Meanwhile, the companys AFT patent covers one of the key enzymatic steps in Gevos unique intracellular pathway for producing isobutanol in yeast.
In laymans terms, these inventions, and others addressed in Gevos pending patent applications, help to turn an industrial yeast strain into a highly efficient cell factory to produce isobutanol, said Brett Lund, general counsel of Gevo.
We used synthetic biology to reprogram the yeast to make isobutanol instead of ethanol. In other words, we changed the yeast so that it makes what we want instead of what it wants, and we made it so it does it really well.
In combination, the inventions described in these two patents are part of Gevos unique technology to produce isobutanol, the company said.
The patents grant to Gevo the right to exclude others from using this technology in the US for their own purposes without Gevos consent. On that note, Gevo also announced a lawsuit against Butamax and its affiliate DuPont.
The lawsuit charges that Butamax and Dupont infringed on Gevos two newly-issued patents.
Our lawsuit is based on Butamaxs own publications describing their use of the technology that Gevo invented first and for which we have received patents, said Mr. Lund. We expect the breadth and strength of our patent estate to grow considerably over the coming months as our patent applications convert into granted patents.
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