ClosedSpecial Notice
Energy, Department of contract category

TECHNOLOGY LICENSING OPPORTUNITY: Thermostable GlowTag (YFAST)

Energy, Department of · ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF

This notice is not accepting responses (deadline was Jan 5, 2026, 7:00 PM EST).

Page kept for research and related open opportunities below. For current work in this category, use the related notices or browse hubs.

Response deadline
Jan 5, 2026, 7:00 PM EST
Posted
Jan 20, 2026
Solicitation
S-167694
Set-aside
No Set aside used
Place of performance
Los Alamos, NM, USA
Contracting office
TRIAD - DOE CONTRACTOR · Columbus · OH
Source
SAM.gov · updated May 9, 2026

Description

The Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists behind this invention developed a new way to make enzymes tougher so they can survive and work well at high temperatures. They used a heat-loving microorganism called Parageobacillus thermoglucosidasius as a testing ground and created a modified version of a fluorogenic protein called YFAST that glows only when it folds correctly. The modified version called hsFAST is stable under heat and by attaching this glowing tag to other enzymes, we can quickly see which ones are working and stable just by checking if they glow. The Challenge: The enzyme engineering industry faces significant challenges, particularly in developing enzymes that can function reliably at high temperatures, which are common in industrial processes such as biofuel production, waste degradation and chemical manufacturing. Most available enzymes come from mesophilic organisms that degrade and become non-functional under heat, while naturally thermostable enzymes from thermophiles are rare, difficult to work with and limited in diversity. Additionally, current screening methods for identifying heat-resistant enzymes are slow, error-prone and produce many false positives, making the development process inefficient. How it Works: This innovation introduces a novel high-throughput screening platform that uses a thermophilic organism (Parageobacillus thermoglucosidasius) combined with a specially engineered thermostable fluorogenic reporter protein (hsFAST). This system enables scalable selection of enzyme variants that remain stable and functional at elevated temperatures. By allowing mesophilic enzymes to be re-engineered for high-heat environments, reducing reliance on cold storage, and streamlining the screening process with direct fluorescence-based selection, this technology overcomes key bottlenecks in enzyme development and opens the door to more robust, cost-effective and versatile enzymes for industrial and environmental applications. Key Advantages: Enables rapid, high-throughput screening at high temperatures. Introduces a thermostable fluorogenic reporter that provides an optical response that correlates to the quantity of the protein it is fused to. Improves screening accuracy by using direct selection rather than elimination-based methods, reducing false positives. Expands access to thermostable enzymes by allowing common mesophilic enzymes to be engineered for heat resistance. Allows for screening and optimization of proteins from thermophilic sources. Reduces storage and operational costs by producing enzymes that remain stable without refrigeration. Market Applications: Biofuels Waste Management Chemical and Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Food and Beverage Processing Textiles and Detergents Development Status: TRL 2-3 U.S. Non-provisional Patent pending 19/284504 LA-UR-25-32018 LANL Tech Partnerships: Unlock the Innovative Potential Los Alamos National Laboratory offers a wide range of cutting-edge technologies and capabilities that may provide your company with a competitive edge in the market and unlock the innovative potential that can enhance, refine, and revolutionize your products. LANL�s licensing program focuses on moving inventions developed by our researchers to commercial innovations. Patented and patent pending inventions and copyrighted software are available to existing and start-up companies through exclusive and non-exclusive licensing agreements. For specific discussions, please contact licensing@lanl.gov. Note: This is not a call for external services for the development of this technology. https://www.lanl.gov/engage/collaboration/feynman-center/partner-with-us/licensing-technology https://www.lanl.gov/engage/collaboration/feynman-center/tech-and-capability-search

What similar awards have paid

Real federal awards already on the books in a similar lane — so you can size the opportunity, not guess. This is public history, not a bid price, cost estimate, or prediction that you will win.

Typical award size

$130,163

Middle of the pack for similar past awards

Most similar awards fall between $21,360 and $14.05M

Lower end$21,360Typical$130,163Higher end$14.05M
Based on 41 similar awardsSame industry code (541714)Same product/service code (6505)Prime contracts (not umbrella IDVs)

Who has won work like this

Public awardees in this lane — useful for competitor scan or teaming ideas, not a ranked list of “best” firms.

Recent examples

A few of the newest similar awards in our index.

Drawn from official USAspending contract records in our index. Always confirm requirements on the SAM.gov notice before you bid.

Intelligence only — not legal advice or a guarantee of award. Always verify requirements on the official SAM.gov notice. Past award amounts are public history, not a suggested bid or prediction. Notice ID 99b177f8d47141d394e223314c7e1194.

Similar open government contracts

More in 541714 →
Federal vendorsMore from Energy, Department ofNAICS 541714PSC 6505New Mexico contracts