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Israeli startup debuts astaxanthin from yeast for human consumption

The ‘new’ source is one that has been known for a long time: Phaffia​ yeast (Phaffia rhodozyma​). The yeast was first isolated by Hermann Pfaff of the University of California Davis in the 1960s.

But NextFerm’s vice president of global marketing Elzaphan Hotam said he believes his startup company is the first to bring the ingredient to market from this source for human consumption. The astaxanthin produced in this way in the past has been devoted to the aquaculture feed​ markets, where is acts primarily as a colorant for the flesh of farmed salmon and trout.

Deep talent pool

Hotam said NextFerm was born out of the fertile Israeli entrepreneurial startup subculture. Many of the company officers and employees were part of another startup that went big—lipids specialist Enzymotec, which was acquired last year by Israeli ingredients firm Frutarom.

“NextFerm marries a cutting edge technology with a wonderful group of individuals in relevant fields,” ​Hotam told NutraIngredients-USA. “We took a small company up to an IPO, and we want to do that again.”

“You can add in to that ambition our expertise in fermentation, and a suite of non GMO techniques for yeast enhancement,”​ he said.

NextFerm has cooperated with Lallemand in the past on a fermentation-based biofuels project, and Hotam said some of the same expertise has been brought to bear on the astaxanthin effort. Promising strains of the yeast that express the highest levels of the carotenoid are identified and cultured to boost the productivity of the overall fermentate.

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