Launch HN: Boost Biomes (YC S19) – Microbes for better crop yields, shelf life
I (Jamie) have been in biotech for over a dozen years. A decade ago, I was at a biofuels company working to grow algae, and fungi ruined our crop. At the time I realized that if we could control the ecosystem, we could prevent these kinds of agricultural disasters. In the meantime, Adam, as a professor at Berkeley National Lab and UC-Berkeley over the last two decades, had been developing a technology platform to understand microbial ecology. When Adam and I met a few years ago, we realized that his technology could address these kinds of challenges. No longer interested in algae as a crop, we saw the opportunity in high-value crops. These include strawberries in the field, apples post-harvest and cannabis as an exploding opportunity.
We're clearly not the first ones to think about microbial products for ag. What sets our approach apart is the technology that Adam developed. Using his approach, we are able to determine what we call an interaction map - the complete set of interactions between microbes from a given environment. The interaction map generates leads for us, including groups of microbes that work together as 'consortia'. Our current lead product candidates are in fact consortia.
Our first product is a soil amendment being sold into the cannabis market. There's a real excitement of the opportunities for the market to expand, and it's an industry full of early-adopters. We're looking longer term, though, as our products will address food production and waste. Fungi destroy enough food to feed 600M people every year—this represents 60% of the people going hungry every year! This is the kind of impact we're after with our tech and with the company.
We look forward to discussing the opportunity and technology!
[+] [-] pazimzadeh|6 years ago|reply
I'm assuming that when you say microbes, you mean bacteria. What about using engineered fungi, which often already act as pesticides? i.e. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28905488
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
We only use naturally-occurring microbes, without genetic engineering. We focus on the unit of the cell, rather than the unit of the gene, to make our products.
[+] [-] rotexo|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] aldoushuxley001|6 years ago|reply
In regards to the "consortia" products, how many different species/genera/etc. are we talking about here? Is it just bacteria or are fungi part of this? What about e.g. nematodes, etc.
Would love to get some more info, but currently website is a little light on the details. Otherwise, kudos and good work. The more development in this space the better.
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
The first consortia we've assembled is just two members, one bacteria and one yeast. We envision that it can get pretty complex (but probably won't include multicellular organisms like nematodes).
[+] [-] brenschluss|6 years ago|reply
‘Controlling the environment to make things better’ has a spotty history (DDT, Monsanto, etc), and I would evaluate good biotech/agtech by how they are actively thinking about these issues.
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
Biological pesticides have a much lower threshold for regulatory approval specifically because they are deemed safer than chemical pesticides.
Customers like replacing their chemical pesticides with our product to lower residual levels of chemicals on their produce. Other countries have more restrictive MRLs (maximum residue levels) permitted on imports than the US does, so products like these are valuable.
[+] [-] rbart|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] billiamyu|6 years ago|reply
Have you found any interesting, but not marketable interactions while looking for viable solutions?
Is Boost Biomes planning on granting academic or other licensing to other parties?
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] carapace|6 years ago|reply
How aware are you guys of the recent work in mycoremediation?
Congratulations and good luck.
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
We can track changes in the micro-ecosystems by sequencing the soil or root metagenomes. We aren't doing this yet, but it's on the path forward.
[+] [-] autojoechen|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
We anticipate benefits that we have yet to prove: higher efficacy, lower risk that the target will evolve resistance, and better persistence in the soil.
[+] [-] baron816|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] refurb|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] all2|6 years ago|reply
What steps are you taking to prevent damaging existing ecosystems with your products?
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] senith|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] person_of_color|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jbacher|6 years ago|reply
There are a number of meat-replacement startup companies, developing replacements for fish, chicken, beef, etc., either by formulating products with protein or animal cells, or with vegetable protein that is formulated to taste and mouthfeel of actual meat.
[+] [-] alpineShu|6 years ago|reply