The scientist who cracked the human genome now hopes to exploit
the properties of DNA to solve the world's pending energy crisis.
J. Craig Venter, who gained worldwide fame in 2000 when
he mapped the human genetic code, is behind a new start-up
called Synthetic Genomics, which plans to create new types
of organisms that, ideally, would produce hydrogen, secrete
nonpolluting heating oil or be able to break down greenhouse
gases.
The initial focus will be on creating "biofactories" for
hydrogen and ethanol, two fuels seen as playing an increasing
role in powering cars in the future. Hydrogen also holds
promise for heating homes and putting juice into electronic
devices.
The raw genetic material for these synthetic micro-organisms
will come from a diverse set of genes from a variety of species,
according to the company. While many of the genes will come
from some of the aquatic micro-organisms that Venter and
his colleagues discovered during extensive ocean voyages
in the last two years, the company will also experiment with
genes from large mammals such as dogs.
"Rapid advances in high throughput DNA sequencing and
synthesis, as well as high performance computing and bioinformatics,
now enable us to synthesize novel photosynthetic and metabolic
pathways," Venter said in a statement earlier this year. "We
are in an era of rapid advances in science and are beginning
the transition from being able to not only read genetic code,
but are now moving to the early stages of being able to write
code."
A small but growing number of researchers are examining
ways to tap the power of biology. At Stanford University,
for instance, professor James Swartz has been conducting
experiments on a soil micro-organism that uses energy absorbed
from light to split water molecules, a chemical reaction
that produces hydrogen. Typically, organisms that derive
energy from the sun--look no farther than the oak tree or
the grass in your backyard--exploit that energy to grow.
J. Craig Venter In Cambridge, Mass., GreenFuel Technologies
has created "bioreactors" filled with algae. The
algae are fed with sunlight, water and carbon-carrying emissions
from power plants. The algae are then harvested and turned
into biodiesel fuel.
Engineering organisms for the benefit of humanity creates
obvious risks. Both Stanford and Synthetic Genomics have
said they are aware of the potential ethical and environmental
issues of their work and will take actions to prevent unwanted
consequences. Lab-created species could escape into the wild
and unpredictably alter the local habitat. Efforts to clone
animals--and talk of cloning humans--have provoked fierce
debate in recent years among scientists, government agencies
and the general public.
But genetic engineering has its adherents too. Jay Keasling,
a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, is
working on synthetic microbes that could one day produce
antimalarial drugs in volume and inexpensively, and thus
potentially help stem one of the world's most devastating
diseases. He has received grants from the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation.
Naturally occurring microbes have been widely used by people
since time immemorial to create everyday products such as
cheese and beer.
The genetic approach to biofuels could eliminate one of
the more prominent difficulties facing biomass energy, which
typically involves burning plant matter or alcohol derived
from plants. Namely, it takes more energy to make biofuels
than the process provides. Even backers of ethanol, a mixture
of gasoline and plant alcohol, have said that one needs to
add in the value of other byproducts created in the ethanol
process to come out ahead.
The metabolic processes of living organisms can be quite
efficient. An oak tree, some scientists have noted, can convert
more sunlight into energy than can silicon solar panels.
Launched quietly in June, Synthetic Genomics emerged out
of Venter's voyage around the globe in the Sorcerer II, his
combination of luxury yacht and floating laboratory. The
trip, which took place in 2003 and 2004, gave Venter an opportunity
to examine a fairly wide variety of little-understood or
heretofore unknown micro-organisms.
A test voyage of the Sorcerer II in the Sargasso Sea off
Bermuda in early 2003 led to the discovery of 1,800 new species
and 1.2 million new genes.
Synthetic Genomics certainly comes stocked with brain power.
Venter's fellow co-founders are Hamilton Smith, who won the
1978 Nobel Prize in Medicine, and Juan Enriquez, the founding
director of Harvard Business School's Life Sciences Project.
Smith and Venter also founded Celera Genomics, which later
became part of pharmaceuticals developer Applera.
Previous Next The company will also work with the J. Craig
Venter Institute, a 200-person nonprofit research organization.
Collectively, Venter and the scientific organizations associated
with him have sequenced the DNA of nearly 300 organisms,
including the fruit fly, mouse, rat and dog.
Draper Fisher Jurvetson, one of the more active Silicon
Valley venture capital firms in alternative energy and so-clean
technologies, is an investor. The firm also has investments
in GreenFuel, solar specialists Konarka and in EnerNoc, which
has developed a system to reduce energy consumption in office
buildings.