Afraid of a little Easter Egg Poo - Maybe You'd Prefer GMO ? - LMAO

QUAD BREATH

Well-Known Member
Companies rush to produce pot products, without the cannabis plant itself

Cannabis on display is seen during a media tour of SpritLeaf's store in Kingston, Ont., Sunday, March 31, 2019. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Lars Hagberg)



Armina Ligaya, The Canadian Press
Published Sunday, April 14, 2019 10:33AM EDT
TORONTO -- Canadian companies are racing to get an edge in the new frontier of the cannabis industry -- which does not involve the leafy green plant at all.

An increasing number of licensed producers and biotechnology firms are moving towards synthetic production of THC and other cannabinoids in a lab, using ingredients such as sugar and yeast, eyeing the potential to produce these active compounds more cheaply than traditional cultivation and extraction.

CannTrust Holdings Inc.'s chief executive Peter Aceto said the Vaughan, Ont.-based licensed producer has a short list of biosynthesis companies that it is in active conversations with, which could result in either a partnership or acquisition.

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Photos

A cannabis plant approaching maturity is photographed in Fenwick, Ont., on Tuesday, June 26, 2018. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Tijana Martin)


Kevin Chen, chief executive of Hyasynth Biologicals, is seen in the company lab in Montreal on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

"We do believe that cannabinoids will be created through biosynthesis, whether it's yeast or sugar or other compounds, at scale at an extremely low cost... And do expect to be investing in that space in the not-too-distant future," he said.

Canada is on the verge of legalizing the next-generation of cannabis products such as edibles and topicals in the coming months, which will allow the industry to tap a broader range of consumers who aren't interested in smoking dried flower.

In turn, the demand for cannabinoids and isolates for use as an ingredient in consumer products is expected to grow "exponentially in the coming years," said AltaCorp analyst David Kideckel.

Synthetic cannabinoid production has the potential to disrupt the cannabis industry supply chain, he added in a recent note.

"We believe that cannabis LP's will begin to pay much closer attention to these companies' technology and its application to their industry, as it offers the potential for significant advantages on an operational and cost basis, as well as product quality and purity."

Other Canadian cannabis companies have already made moves in this space. Moncton-based Organigram Inc. in September closed a $10-million investment deal with Hyasynth Biologicals, in a bid to boost its access to the Montreal-based company's proprietary methods involving fermentation of yeast.

Also last September, licensed producer Cronos Group Inc. announced a strategic partnership with Boston-based Ginkgo Bioworks Inc., also focusing on cannabinoid production via fermentation at commercial scale, in a deal worth roughly US$22-million.

Cronos' chief executive Michael Gorenstein said during a recent conference call that this partnership is key to its strategy of focusing on developing branded products and intellectual property, rather than the capital-intensive process of cultivation and production. He added that Cronos and Ginkgo will focus on synthetic production of THC, the compound which produces a high, and CBD, the non-impairing compound believed to have anti-inflammatory properties. The two companies through the partnership will also target six other rare cannabinoids, which are "economically impractical" to produce with high purity at scale through traditional cultivation and extraction," he added.

"We at Cronos believe that rare cannabinoids are key to product differentiation, but today are nearly impossible to produce commercially," Gorenstein told analysts.

Rather than using a solvent, carbon dioxide or another method to remove extracts from the cannabis or hemp plant, synthetic production of cannabinoids involves using a controlled chemical reaction to produce these coveted compounds. Synthetic production is already commonly used in the pharmaceutical industry, such as the use of yeast fermentation to biosynthesize insulin.

One method of synthetic production is called biosynthesis, in which a biological organism such as bacteria, fungus or algae are used as agents to yield cannabinoids, AltaCorp said.

It's similar to brewing beer, where water, yeast and malted grain are combined and fermented to produce an alcoholic beverage. However, the yeast is instead genetically engineered to produce the necessary enzymes to yield cannabinoids instead.

"We'll remove the genes that tell it to produce ethanol, and then we'll put in a new set of genes that will give it the machinery to produce THC," said Kevin Chen, the chief executive and co-founder of Hyasynth.

Biosynthesis has the potential to produce large quantities of cannabinoids, consistently, with a high level of purity and precision, according to AltaCorp. As well, at roughly less than $1,000 per kilogram, it is much cheaper than growing cannabis or hemp and extracting it, Kideckel wrote in a recent note.

That's a particularly attractive prospect as Canadian producers increasingly look at ways to reduce costs, such as outdoor growing in the warmer climes of B.C., as dried cannabis becomes a commodity.

Lab-generated cannabinoids via synthesis will not replace plant-based extraction, but will be an added tool in companies' arsenals, Kideckel added.

Still, biosynthesis and other methods of synthetic cannabinoid production are still in the "early stages" and could take "years of research and development to perfect," he added.

In February, UC Berkeley synthetic biologists published a study in the journal Nature demonstrating how they used engineered brewer's yeast to produce THC, CBD and other cannabinoids.

Meanwhile, there has been a flurry of companies flooding into the biosynthesis space within the last six months, said Chen, who co-founded Hyasynth in 2014.

"Everybody is jumping into this stuff now," he said. "It went from us and two other companies to 20 companies."

Competitors include Vancouver-based InMed Pharmaceuticals and California-based Amyris Inc.

The race is on, and Hyasynth is aiming to establish its own small-scale facility and be able to sell a product by the end of the year. The company is aiming to become an ingredient supplier, he added.

However, Chen said there is "a lot to be nailed down, and it will be an ongoing process of improvement."

"We're already pretty confident that we'll get there."
 

QUAD BREATH

Well-Known Member

Tequila Cannabis
Scientists Gene-Edited Tequila Bacteria to Make Cannabinoids
This bacteria spits out THC instead of tequila.
Victor TangermannMarch 27th 2019
Lime Salt THC
A German pharmaceutical company called Farmako just registered a patent for a process in which genetically modified tequila bacterium produce a range of biosynthetic cannabinoids — the stuff that you usually get by growing marijuana plants — by feeding on sugar.

The process that could make producing cannabinoids like tetrahydrocannabinol, better known as THC, a thousand times cheaper, according to the company.

Yeast vs. Bacteria
Last month, Futurism reported on a team of researchers at UC Berkeley who figured out a way to manufacture THC and cannabidiol (CBD) from specially bioengineered brewer’s yeast. Farmako claims its new technique represents the first production of cannabinoids through biosynthesis without the use of yeast.

Farmako argues that using bacteria instead of yeast could make the process of extracting cannabinoids much easier on an industrial scale, as the cannabinoids and the yeast cells have to be broken up after synthesis.

The bacteria, on the other hand, “releases the produced cannabinoids directly into the surrounding medium,” said Patrick Schmitt, co-founder of Farmako, in a press release. “This allows continuous production without interruption.”

Sugar High
The newly named bacterium Zymomonas cannabinoidis — a gene-edited version of Zymomonas mobilis, which is used to produce tequila — can not only produce cannabinoids by eating sugar, but it can also produce a massive range of “more than 180 known cannabinoids,” according to the press release.

To stop the bacterium from producing alcohol, the team removed genes from the bacterial genome.

To switch between cannabinoids, “only a single gene has to be exchanged,” said Schmitt, co-founder of Farmako.

Editor’s note: an earlier version of this article mistakenly referred to Farmako’s organism as a yeast, rather than a bacteria. It has been updated.

More on cannabinoid production: Scientists Gene-Hacked Yeast to Make THC Instead of Booze
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
{As well, at roughly less than $1,000 per kilogram, it is much cheaper than growing cannabis or hemp and extracting it, Kideckel wrote in a recent note.""




sells cheaper on the BM NOW! :lol:

idiots! Glorified MJ wannabes
 

odam2k

Well-Known Member
It's similar to brewing beer, where water, yeast and malted grain are combined and fermented to produce an alcoholic beverage. However, the yeast is instead genetically engineered to produce the necessary enzymes to yield cannabinoids instead.

"We'll remove the genes that tell it to produce ethanol, and then we'll put in a new set of genes that will give it the machinery to produce THC," said Kevin Chen, the chief executive and co-founder of Hyasynth.
Hmmm, I already make my own moonshine with sugar, water, and yeast... So if I could get my hands on this modified yeast, I could ferment thc?

Doesn't sound very tasty, but for edibles, that would be cool...
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
Canadian companies are racing to get an edge in the new frontier of the cannabis industry -- which does not involve the leafy green plant at all
LOL they've finally realized they can't grow for shit so they're pivoting to having someone else to make a synthetic or bastardized version of cannabinoids. GOOD LUCK, there are over 100 different cannabinoids. How much does a gram of THC cost the consumer after all this lab bullshit? Because it still costs less than a dollar to produce a gram of flower, or a couple bucks to get a gram of THC.
 
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