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Active HORIZON European Commission

Engineering Eco-Friendly and Sustainable Reflecting Crystals in Yeast to Replace Hazardous TiO2 Based Pigments


Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Weizmann Institute of Science
Country Israel
Start Date Aug 01, 2024
End Date Jan 31, 2026
Duration 548 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101188091
Grant Description

The superior optical properties and stability of Titanium dioxide (TiO2) has made the material attractive to many industries, for use in food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals.

Despite these benefits, the wide use of TiO2 has raised significant health concerns, culminating in the 2022 European Union's decision to ban its use as a food additive.

This regulatory shift has precipitated an urgent demand for healthier, environmentally sustainable alternatives that do not compromise on performance.

Unfortunately, current alternatives fail to match TiO2 in terms of efficacy and stability, thereby limiting their adoption.

This PoC, proposes an innovative solution by which yeast serve as eco-friendly ""biofactories"" to produce guanine crystals.

These crystals, which are naturally utilized by animals to reflect light, possess remarkable optical properties, with enhanced thermostability, and superior compatibility compared to current TiO2 alternatives.

We will modify yeast to express the specialized highly efficient guanine-producing enzymes, originally identified in zebrafish as part of our ERC project.

Inspired by nature, our project will exploit yeast's remarkable biosynthetic abilities to obtain efficient production of these crystals.

Our preliminary results demonstrate the feasibility of this approach, and are backed by robust metabolomic profiling that enables precise measurement of guanine levels, identification of metabolic bottlenecks, and detection of by-products.

In preparation for commercial rollout, our strategy involves mapping our innovation within the EU food industry, identifying precise market segments, and crafting an initial business model.

This multifaceted approach is designed to both showcase the economic viability and market potential of our yeast-produced guanine crystals and also to position them as a safe, sustainable, and high-performing TiO2 alternative, in line with the EU's health-centric regulatory framework and consumer expectations.

All Grantees

Weizmann Institute of Science

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