Patents by Inventor Brian A. Sefton

Brian A. Sefton has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 12247194
    Abstract: Nitrogen in a form suitable for feeding a population of microbes in a bioreactor is produced by reacting nitrogen gas and hydrogen gas to form ammonia plus an unreacted gas stream under conditions favorable to having little unreacted nitrogen gas in the unreacted gas stream. The ammonia, or a compound derived from the ammonia is fed to the microbes and the unreacted gas stream is optionally fed back into the reaction, or fed into the bioreactor. Oxygen can be produced, such as by electrolysis, and also provided to the microbes. Hydrogen from the electrolysis can be added to the hydrogen being reacted with nitrogen gas, and/or can be added to the bioreactor. Where nitrogen gas is produced from air separation, the residual gases can be another source of oxygen.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 20, 2020
    Date of Patent: March 11, 2025
    Assignee: Oakbio, Inc.
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Patent number: 11851664
    Abstract: A crtW gene from a strain of Brevundimonas is disclosed that encodes a novel ketolase for carotenoid synthesis. An exemplary synthetic operon containing additional relevant carotenoid gene sequences is also provided, where the expression of the synthetic operon is used to produce ketocarotenoids. Suitable DNA expression constructs derived from these sequences are inserted into an expression host for expression. The expression product is a ketolase enzyme that is operable for transforming beta-carotene into canthaxanthin and astaxanthin.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 5, 2021
    Date of Patent: December 26, 2023
    Assignee: OAKBIO, INC.
    Inventors: Chia-Han Song, William J. Coleman, Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20230000125
    Abstract: Aquafeed, animal feed, and other food products, as well as nutritional and pharmaceutical compounds, chemicals and biomaterials are important commodities that can be produced at commercial scale by fermentation of microorganisms. The present invention provides a method for producing these valuable multi-carbon compounds from simple gas feedstocks, such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen, by cultivating a consortium of microbial cells specially selected for this purpose in an aqueous culture medium. In addition to exploiting inexpensive feedstocks, such as waste industrial gas for this cultivation, the platform described herein also provides the advantage of removing carbon dioxide and other waste gases from industrial emissions, which would otherwise contribute to global climate change. Furthermore, the cultivation of a microbial consortium can provide highly nutritious components to a feed blend that might not be available from a monoculture.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 9, 2022
    Publication date: January 5, 2023
    Inventors: Brian A. Sefton, William J. Coleman
  • Patent number: 11439172
    Abstract: Aquafeed, animal feed, and other food products, as well as nutritional and pharmaceutical compounds, chemicals and biomaterials are important commodities that can be produced at commercial scale by fermentation of microorganisms. The present invention provides a method for producing these valuable multi-carbon compounds from simple gas feedstocks, such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen, by cultivating a consortium of microbial cells specially selected for this purpose in an aqueous culture medium. In addition to exploiting inexpensive feedstocks, such as waste industrial gas for this cultivation, the platform described herein also provides the advantage of removing carbon dioxide and other waste gases from industrial emissions, which would otherwise contribute to global climate change. Furthermore, the cultivation of a microbial consortium can provide highly nutritious components to a feed blend that might not be available from a monoculture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 3, 2017
    Date of Patent: September 13, 2022
    Assignee: OAKBIO, INC.
    Inventors: Brian A Sefton, William J Coleman
  • Publication number: 20220204979
    Abstract: A crtW gene from a strain of Brevundimonas is disclosed that encodes a novel ketolase for carotenoid synthesis. An exemplary synthetic operon containing additional relevant carotenoid gene sequences is also provided, where the expression of the synthetic operon is used to produce ketocarotenoids. Suitable DNA expression constructs derived from these sequences are inserted into an expression host for expression. The expression product is a ketolase enzyme that is operable for transforming beta-carotene into canthaxanthin and astaxanthin.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 5, 2021
    Publication date: June 30, 2022
    Inventors: Chia-Han Song, William J. Coleman, Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20210337829
    Abstract: High protein and high nutritional products comprising a mix of specific bacterial species, and methods of producing the same, are provided. Products can be produced via a co-culture of axenic source strains grown on simple gas feedstocks, such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen, as can be provided by industrial waste gases. A consortium of bacterial strains specially selected for this purpose is cultured in an aqueous culture medium.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 6, 2021
    Publication date: November 4, 2021
    Inventors: Brian A. Sefton, William J. Coleman
  • Publication number: 20210147787
    Abstract: Nitrogen in a form suitable for feeding a population of microbes in a bioreactor is produced by reacting nitrogen gas and hydrogen gas to form ammonia plus an unreacted gas stream under conditions favorable to having little unreacted nitrogen gas in the unreacted gas stream. The ammonia, or a compound derived from the ammonia is fed to the microbes and the unreacted gas stream is optionally fed back into the reaction, or fed into the bioreactor. Oxygen can be produced, such as by electrolysis, and also provided to the microbes. Hydrogen from the electrolysis can be added to the hydrogen being reacted with nitrogen gas, and/or can be added to the bioreactor. Where nitrogen gas is produced from air separation, the residual gases can be another source of oxygen.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 20, 2020
    Publication date: May 20, 2021
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20190300844
    Abstract: Production of nutrient-rich media, from an initial minimal medium, the rich media being suitable for cultivating heterotrophic cells, is described. These methods employ gas fermentation of photoautotrophic and/or chemoautotrophic microbes, under chemoautotrophic conditions, using carbon in common industrial waste gases to feed the growing biomass. The microbes also transform some of the carbon into organic nutrients that are released into the minimal medium thereby enriching the minimal medium. In further methods the nutrient-rich medium is then used to cultivate heterotrophic cells.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 17, 2019
    Publication date: October 3, 2019
    Inventors: Brian Sefton, William Coleman
  • Publication number: 20190000124
    Abstract: Aquafeed, animal feed, and other food products, as well as nutritional and pharmaceutical compounds, chemicals and biomaterials are important commodities that can be produced at commercial scale by fermentation of microorganisms. The present invention provides a method for producing these valuable multi-carbon compounds from simple gas feedstocks, such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen and oxygen, by cultivating a consortium of microbial cells specially selected for this purpose in an aqueous culture medium. In addition to exploiting inexpensive feedstocks, such as waste industrial gas for this cultivation, the platform described herein also provides the advantage of removing carbon dioxide and other waste gases from industrial emissions, which would otherwise contribute to global climate change. Furthermore, the cultivation of a microbial consortium can provide highly nutritious components to a feed blend that might not be available from a monoculture.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 3, 2017
    Publication date: January 3, 2019
    Inventors: Brian A. Sefton, William J. Coleman
  • Patent number: 9206451
    Abstract: Systems and methods for employing chemoautotrophic micro-organisms to capture carbon from industrial waste are provided. An exemplary system comprises an industrial source, such as a cement plant, and a bioreactor including the micro-organisms. The bioreactor is fed the waste stream from the source, which provides carbon to the micro-organisms, and is also fed hydrogen, from which the micro-organisms derive their energy. Additional or alternative carbon can be provided from a gasifier fed an organic feedstock. The carbon provided to the micro-organisms is converted into chemical products which can be recovered from the bioreactor. Hydrogen can be produced by electrolysis using electricity generated by a renewable energy source.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 11, 2012
    Date of Patent: December 8, 2015
    Assignee: Oakbio, Inc.
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Patent number: 9096847
    Abstract: Bioreactors comprising an electrical stimulation system supply a pulsed and/or modulated electrical input to microbes that use the electrical stimulation and available CO2 to produce valuable organic compounds. Electrical power, such as from renewable sources remotely located with respect to the power grid, can be converted to chemical energy in the form of the organic compounds, which can be stored and/or transported readily.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 24, 2011
    Date of Patent: August 4, 2015
    Assignee: Oakbio, Inc.
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20140050943
    Abstract: Microbial fuel cells including multiple electrodes, and systems of such fuel cells, are provided. An exemplary fuel cell includes a population of exoelectrogenic microbes and at least two anodes in an anode chamber, and a cathode in a cathode chamber. A path exists between the chambers for conducting hydrogen ions and each anode is connected to the cathode by a separate external circuit. Electrical output from the fuel cell is maximized by optimizing the microbe population, achieved by dynamically controlling the sub-populations at each of the multiple anodes. Systems comprising multiple such fuel cells connected by a dynamically reconfigurable fluidics system provide further optimization.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 16, 2013
    Publication date: February 20, 2014
    Applicant: Oakbio Inc.
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Patent number: 8518566
    Abstract: Microbial fuel cells including multiple electrodes, and systems of such fuel cells, are provided. An exemplary fuel cell includes a population of exoelectrogenic microbes and at least two anodes in an anode chamber, and a cathode in a cathode chamber. A path exists between the chambers for conducting hydrogen ions and each anode is connected to the cathode by a separate external circuit. Electrical output from the fuel cell is maximized by optimizing the microbe population, achieved by dynamically controlling the sub-populations at each of the multiple anodes. Systems comprising multiple such fuel cells connected by a dynamically reconfigurable fluidics system provide further optimization.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 18, 2010
    Date of Patent: August 27, 2013
    Assignee: Oakbio, Inc.
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20130065285
    Abstract: Systems and methods for employing chemoautotrophic micro-organisms to capture carbon from industrial waste are provided. An exemplary system comprises an industrial source, such as a cement plant, and a bioreactor including the micro-organisms. The bioreactor is fed the waste stream from the source, which provides carbon to the micro-organisms, and is also fed hydrogen, from which the micro-organisms derive their energy. Additional or alternative carbon can be provided from a gasifier fed an organic feedstock. The carbon provided to the micro-organisms is converted into chemical products which can be recovered from the bioreactor. Hydrogen can be produced by electrolysis using electricity generated by a renewable energy source.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 11, 2012
    Publication date: March 14, 2013
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20100239920
    Abstract: Microbial fuel cells including multiple electrodes, and systems of such fuel cells, are provided. An exemplary fuel cell includes a population of exoelectrogenic microbes and at least two anodes in an anode chamber, and a cathode in a cathode chamber. A path exists between the chambers for conducting hydrogen ions and each anode is connected to the cathode by a separate external circuit. Electrical output from the fuel cell is maximized by optimizing the microbe population, achieved by dynamically controlling the sub-populations at each of the multiple anodes. Systems comprising multiple such fuel cells connected by a dynamically reconfigurable fluidics system provide further optimization.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 18, 2010
    Publication date: September 23, 2010
    Inventor: Brian Sefton
  • Publication number: 20070179123
    Abstract: Methods and compositions are provided comprising a therapeutically effective amount of a compound of formula I wherein R1-4, W, X, Y and Z are as defined in the specification, for inhibiting and treating diseases and disorders associated with pathogenic proteins causing neurodegenerative diseases and amyloid diseases, such as protease resistant prion proteins (PrPSc) and those associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), Alzheimer's Disease, amyloidosis, and the like.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 8, 2006
    Publication date: August 2, 2007
    Inventors: Peter Chiang, Daniel Levy, Meng Guo, Valeri Martichonok, Brian Sefton