Patent applications filed and patents owned by E. I. du Pont de
Nemours and Company
Technology overview
E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. is a multinational company that
conducts R&D in the science field including agriculture, electronics, health
care, safety and protection. The patent family described below discloses a
method to detect sublethal levels of environmental contaminants using a
lyophilized trangenic bacterium containing a luxCDABE gene complex that
is under the control of a stress-inducible promoter. Related scientific
publications are:[add a comment]
- Van Dyk et al. (1994). Rapid and sensitive pollutant detection by
induction of heat shock gene-bioluminescence gene fusions.
Appl
Environ Microbiol. 60(5):1414-20. (dnaKp::lux or
grpEp::lux into E. coli)
- Van Dyk et al. (1995). Synergistic induction of the heat shock
response in Escherichia coli by simultaneous treatment with chemical
inducers.
J
Bacteriol. 177(20):6001-4. (lonp::lux into E. coli)
- Van Dyk et al. (1995). Responses to toxicants of an
Escherichia coli strain carrying a uspA'::lux genetic fusion
and an E. coli strain carrying a grpE'::lux fusion are
similar.
Appl
Environ Microbiol. 61(11):4124-7. (uspAp::lux into E.
coli)
- Belkin et al. (1996). Oxidative stress detection with
Escherichia coli harboring a katG'::lux fusion.
Appl
Environ Microbiol. 62(7):2252-6. (katGp::lux into E.
coli)
- Vollmer et al. (1997). Detection of DNA damage by use of
Escherichia coli carrying recA'::lux, uvrA'::lux, or
alkA'::lux reporter plasmids.
Appl
Environ Microbiol. 63(7):2566-71. (recAp::lux,
uvrAp::lux, or alkAp::lux into E. coli)
- Wagner and Van Dyk (1998). Cryopreservation and reawakening.
Methods
Mol Biol. 102:123-7.
- Van Dyk (1998). Stress detection using bioluminescent reporters of the
heat-shock response.
Methods
Mol Biol. 1998;102:153-60. (review)
- Bechor et al. (2002). Recombinant microorganisms as environmental
biosensors: pollutants detection by Escherichia coli bearing
fabA'::lux fusions.
J
Biotechnol. 94(1):125-32. (fabAp::lux into E. coli)
Many of the transgenic E. coli containing an inducible
promoter :: reporter gene construct are provided in the examples of WO
1994/13831, also filed by E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. (see chapter 5 -
Detection of metals and other toxic compounds).[add a comment]
Details of patent documents
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Patent or Publication No.
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Title, Independent Claims and Summary
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Assignee and licensing information
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CA 2200702
- Earlliest priority - 23 Nov 1994
- Filed - 20 Nov 1995
- Granted - 5 Dec 2000
- Lapsed - 21 Nov 2005
- Expected expiry - not applicable
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Title - Lyophilized bioluminescent bacterial reagent for the
detection of toxicants
Claim 1
A method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental
insult with a lyophilized biological reagent, said reagent comprising
- a detector prokaryote microorganism containing an
expressible luxCDABE gene complex under the control of a
stress inducible promoter sequence, the method comprising the
steps of:
(i) rehydrating the lyophilized biological reagent in a
suitable amount of water wherein a baseline bioluminescence is
produced;
(ii) immediately contacting the rehydrated reagent with a sample suspected of
containing an environmental insult to form a reagent mixture;
(iii) incubating the mixture for at least 20 minutes and at a temperature of up
to 30°C and;
(iv) detecting a change in bioluminescence from the mixture.
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Claim 5
A lyophilized biological reagent comprising
- a transformed bacteria containing an expressible luxCDABE gene
complex under the control of a stress inducible promoter sequence.
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Claim 6
A kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising the following in packaged combination:
(i) an aliquoted lyophilized biological reagent comprising;
(a) a detector prokaryotic microorganism cell containing a DNA fragment
comprising a stress inducible promoter operably linked to the
luxCDABE gene complex;
(b) a suitable buffer, and
(c) a cryoprotective reagent;
(ii) a rehydrating reagent; and
(iii) a suitable growth media.
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The claims are generally drawn towards:
- a method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult with
a prokaryote microorganism containing an expressible luxCDABE gene
complex under the control of a stress inducible promoter (claim 1)
- a lyophilized biological reagent comprising a bacteria transformed with an
expressible luxCDABE gene complex under the control of a stress
inducible promoter sequence (claim 5)
- a kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising a prokaryotic microorganism cell containing a DNA fragment comprising
a stress inducible promoter operably linked to the luxCDABE gene
complex (claim 6)
Definitions extracted from the description are:
- (Environmental) insult - any substance or environmental change that results
in an alteration of normal cellular metabolism in a bacterial cell or population
of cells
- Detector (prokaryote micro)organism - a prokaryote microorganism which
contains a gene fusion consisting of a stress inducible promoter fused to the
lux gene complex (luxCDABE gene complex) and which is capable
of expressing the lux gene products in response to an environmental
insult
- Stress inducible promoter - any promoter capable of activating a stress gene
and causing the expression of the stress gene product
- Bioluminescence - phenomenon of light emission from any living organism
- Lyophilized biological reagent - a detector organism which contains a gene
fusion consisting of a stress inducible promoter fused to the lux gene complex
and which is freeze-dried in a specific medium and is capable of expressing the
lux gene products in response to an environmental insult, immediately upon
rehydration
- Operably linked - the fusion of two fragments of DNA in a proper orientation
and reading frame to be transcribed into functional RNA.
Comments:
As this patent has lapsed due to non-payment of maintenance fees, this patent
currently does not have any enforceable rights.
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E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company
1007 MARKET STREET WILMINGTON, DE 19898
Licensing information:
Ph +1-(781) 972-0607
Email dupont@yet2.com
DuPont has a website called 'DuPont Technology Bank', which contains
information on licensing patented technology by their company:
http://dupont.t2h.yet2.com/t2h/page/homepage/
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EP
793729
- Earlliest priority - 23 Nov 1994
- Filed - 20 Nov 1995
- Granted - 21 Aug 2002
- Expected expiry - 20 Nov 2015
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Title - Lyophilized bioluminescent bacterial reagent for the
detection of toxicants
Claim 1
A method of detecting the presence of an environmental insult with a
lyophilized biological reagent said reagent comprising a detector organism
containing an expressible lux gene complex under the control of a
stress inducible promoter sequence, the method comprising the steps of:
(i) rehydrating the lyophilized biological reagent in a suitable amount of
water wherein a baseline bioluminescence is produced;
(ii) immediately contacting the rehydrated reagent with a sample suspected of
containing an environmental insult to form a reagent mixture;
(iii) incubating the mixture for at least 20 minutes and at a temperature of up
to 300˚C and;
(iv) detecting a change in bioluminescence from the mixture.
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Claim 10
A lyophilized biological reagent comprising a transformed bacteria containing
an expressible lux gene complex under the control of a stress inducible
promoter sequence.
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Claim 11
A kit for detecting the presence of an environmental insult comprising the
following in packaged combination:
(i) an aliquoted lyophilized biological reagent comprising;
(a) a detector cell containing a DNA fragment comprising a stress promoter gene
operably linked to the lux gene complex;
(b) a suitable buffer; and
(c) a cryoprotective reagent;
(ii) a rehydrating reagent; and
(iii) a suitable growth media.
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Designated contracting States at the time of grant are: Austria (patent
lapsed as reported by INPADOC), Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark (patent
lapsed as reported by INPADOC), Spain (patent lapsed as reported by INPADOC),
France, United Kingdom, Greece (patent lapsed as reported by INPADOC), Ireland
(patent lapsed as reported by INPADOC), Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg (patent
lapsed as reported by EPO), Monaco, Netherlands, Portugal (patent lapsed as
reported by INPADOC), Sweden (patent lapsed as reported by INPADOC)
The claims are generally drawn towards:
- a method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult with
a detector organism containing an expressible lux gene complex under
the control of a stress inducible promoter (claim 1)
- a lyophilized biological reagent comprising a bacteria transformed with an
expressible lux gene complex under the control of a stress inducible
promoter sequence (claim 10)
- a kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising a detector cell containing a DNA fragment comprising a stress
inducible promoter operably linked to the lux gene complex (claim 11)
Definitions extracted from the specification are provided in CA 2200702.
Comments:
There is no limit on the type of lux gene complex nor type of detector
organism in EP 793729.
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US
5731163
- Earlliest priority - 23 Nov 1994
- Filed - 22 Nov 1996
- Granted - 24 March 1998
- Expected expiry - 22 Nov 2016
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Title - Lyophilized bioluminescent bacterial reagent for the
detection of toxicants
Claim 1
A method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult with a
lyophilized biological reagent said reagent comprising
- a detector prokaryotic microorganism containing an expressible
luxCDABE gene complex under the control of a stress inducible promoter
sequence, the method comprising the steps of:
(i) rehydrating the lyophilized biological reagent in a suitable amount of
water wherein a baseline bioluminescence is produced;
(ii) immediately contacting the rehydrated reagent with a sample suspected of
containing an environment insult to form a reagent mixture;
(iii) incubating the mixture for at least 20 minutes and at a temperature of up
to 30° C. and;
(iv) detecting an increase in bioluminescence from the mixture.
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Claim 6
A lyophilized biological reagent comprising
- bacteria transformed with an expressible luxCDABE gene complex
under the control of a stress inducible promoter sequence.
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Claim 7
A kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising the following in packaged combination:
(i) an aliquoted lyophilized biological reagent comprising;
(a) a detector prokaryotic microorganism cell containing a DNA fragment
comprising a stress promoter gene operably linked to a luxCDABE gene
complex;
(b) a suitable buffer; and
(c) a cryo protective reagent;
(ii) a rehydrating reagent; and
(iii) a suitable growth media.
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The claims are generally drawn towards:
- a method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult with
a prokaryotic microorganism containing an expressible luxCDABE gene
complex under the control of a stress inducible promoter (claim 1)
- a lyophilized biological reagent comprising bacteria transformed with an
expressible luxCDABE gene complex under the control of a stress
inducible promoter sequence (claim 6)
- a kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising a prokaryotic microorganism cell containing a DNA fragment comprising
a stress inducible promoter operably linked to the luxCDABE gene
complex (claim 7)
Definitions extracted from the specification are provided in CA 2200702.
Comments:
US 5731163 recites the same three independent claims as those of CA 2200702,
which limits the detector organism to be a prokaryotic microorganism, and that
the reporter gene is an expressible luxCDABE gene (and not any
lux gene complex).
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WO
1996/16187
- Earlliest priority - 23 Nov 1994
- Filed - 20 Nov 1995
- Published - 30 May 1996
- Expected expiry - not applicable
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Title - Lyophilized bioluminescent bacterial reagent for the
detection of toxicants
Claim 1
A method of detecting the presence of an environmental insult with a
lyophilized biological reagent said reagent comprising a detector organism
containing an expressible lux gene complex under the control of a
stress inducible promoter sequence, the method comprising the steps of:
(i) rehydrating the lyophilized biological reagent in a suitable amount of
water wherein a baseline bioluminescence is produced;
(ii) immediately contacting the rehydrated reagent with a sample suspected of
containing an environmental insult to form a reagent mixture;
(iii) incubating the mixture for at least 20 minutes and at a temperature of up
to 30˚C and;
(iv) detecting a change in bioluminescence from the mixture.
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Claim 10
A lyophilized biological reagent comprising a transformed bacteria containing
an expressible lux gene complex under the control of a stress inducible
promoter sequence.
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Claim 11
A kit for detecting the presence of an environmental insult comprising the
following in packaged combination:
(i) an aliquoted lyophilized biological reagent comprising;
(a) a detector cell containing a DNA fragment comprising a stress promoter
gene operably linked to the lux gene complex;
(b) a suitable buffer; and
(c) a cryoprotective reagent;
(ii) a rehydrating reagent; and
(iii) a suitable growth media.
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The claims are generally drawn towards:
- a method of detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult with
a detector organism containing an expressible lux gene complex under
the control of a stress inducible promoter (claim 1)
- a lyophilized biological reagent comprising a bacteria transformed with an
expressible lux gene complex under the control of a stress inducible
promoter sequence (claim 10)
- a kit for detecting the presence of a sublethal environmental insult
comprising a detector cell containing a DNA fragment comprising a stress
inducible promoter operably linked to the lux gene complex (claim 11)
Definitions extracted from the specification are provided in CA 2200702.
Comments:
Since this is a published application and not a granted patent, the claims
above do not have enforceable rights.
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Remarks
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National phase entry of WO 1996/16187 in Japan (JP H10/509049) is deemed to
be withdrawn (notice of rejection created on 21 Oct 1999, last correspondence
recorded on 18 Nov 1999).
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Search strategy
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Search details
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Date of search
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08/05/2006
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Database searched
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Patent Lens
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Type of search
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Simple, stemming on
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Collections searched
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AU-B, US-A, US-B, EP-B, WO
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Search terms
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US '5731163'
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Results
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1
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Comments
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This patent document was identified as a reference in the description of
US 2001/034039 - Bioluminescent organism for detecting toxic
substances
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There are no comments.