This application claims the benefit of provisional filing 626155442 as a priority for this application.
The field of the invention is biochemical engineering and industrial microbiology.
Biomolecules and media for microbial growth and selective cultivation are widely known in the public domain. The modern field of microbiology uses selective media to isolate and culture microorganisms. The inventor has discovered a novel, previously unknown bacteria species which produces a novel, unrecorded biomolecule from the growth media. The invention described herein is a method for obtaining pure concentrates of the biomolecule discovered. Shrimp and crab meal are in the public domain as commodities used for a variety of agricultural, food, and aqua-culture as well as recreational fishing uses.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,997,469 Moore describes the use of chemically treated shrimp meal in an odor reduced nitrogen source for animal feed and fertilizer compositions.
In another example of the prior art in U.S. Pat. No. 7,208,184, Chen describes the use of shrimp and crab meal in compositions for fish bait.
Another example of the prior art in U.S. Pat. No. 5,618,574 Bunch describes their use in fish food compositions.
In U.S. Pat. No. 9,687,449, Harel describes the use of shrimp meal as part of a nutraceutical containing fish food.
The food and agriculture uses which apply to humans and livestock are regulated by the FDA, and thus subject to microbial testing. The fact that this bacteria was previously unknown to science along with it's microbial products is due to the fact that the use of these materials did not bloom sufficient biomass to detect and identify the bacteria attests to the unique conditions required to bloom it into a monoculture. In addition, many food manufacturing techniques sterilize the material destroying the organism. Analytical tests using microbiological identification are mostly geared towards identifying pathogenic organisms.
These are the primary reasons why the subject matter at the foundation of the invention is new science, and currently only revealed to the examiner.
Protein and DNA assays have failed to identify the bacteria using the largest databases available to science. This confirms the bacteria is a cryptobacteria and a novel microbiological discovery by the inventor
It's microbial products were also undetected until the inventor carried out detailed analytical testing of the products using GC/mass spectrometer.
The most advanced chemical databases available to date confirm the biomolecules produced are newly discovered by the inventor as well.
The bacteria is naturally occurring, yet normally undetectable, and subsequently it's unique products went undetected as well. This is the domaine of fundamental science only and is not being claimed as an invention, but simply as a non-published scientific study which lays the foundations of the invention claimed.
One object of the invention is to produce concentrated 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine and 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine di-monomer. Yet another object of the invention is to create a monoculture of a specific species of bacteria. Yet another object of the invention is to create 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine synthetically using chemical catalysts. Yet another object of the invention is to create 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine monomer using immobilized or dissolved enzymes. Another object of the invention is to produce the monomer 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine and it's di-monomer form in solid state fermentation on wetted media powder. Another object of the invention is to create a monoculture of the 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine producing cryptobacteria in water and in aqueous fermentation. Yet another object of the invention is to synthesize glucosamine into deoxyglucosamine in solution with chemical reducing agents.
The invention is a method for synthesizing and selectively biosynthesizing the purified monomer and dimer of 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine using a cryptobacteria and or synthetic reduction of adjacent hydroxyls on the glucosamine molecule precursor in solution.
Shrimp and crab meal are micronized into a fine powder and fermented under aerobic conditions in pure form to selectively bloom a cryptobacteria which in turn biodegrades the meal exclusively into 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine. In another preferred embodiment, glucosamine is dissolved into a solvent with stocheometric amounts of catalyzed reducing agent and reduced to deoxy-glucosamine.
Crab and or shrimp meal are micronized into a fine powder. The ensuing powder is then applied to a porous surface and wetted enough to completely moisten the powder. The powder is spread out to a few millimeters of thickness to allow maximum aerobic mass exchanges. The crypto-bacteria is allowed to bloom at room temperature for 48-72 hours and does so to the exclusion of all microorganisms excepting the cryptobacteria. The cryptobacteria fully bloomed into a monoculture, biodegrades the crustacean meal and converts all the available biopolymers to only one microbial product, 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine.
The resulting monomer can be leached through the media column and recuperated in pure form after filtering out any bacteria using appropriate filtration such as diatomaceous earth or filter paper. This can also be carried out in media based agriculture both with and without soil. The monomer has a pronounced auxin effect on plants.
In another example of the invention, 5 grams of micronized shrimp or crab meal is added per gallon of tap-water, and subjected to a vortex in a fermenter under maximum oxygenation. After forty eight hours of fermentation, the cryptobacteria blooms on the meal particles and begins to biodegrade them into a solution which contains only the bacteria and the monomer and dimer of 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine and meal particles which eventually is completely converted to biomass and the desired monomer.
In another example, glucosamine is dissolved in a solvent, and treated with a reducing agent in the presence of catalysts. The 3-4 deoxy-glucosamine which results is purified out of solution by fractional crystallization.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62615542 | Jan 2018 | US |