(Press-News.org) ATLANTA, Ind. – Insignum AgTech® and Beck’s have signed an agreement to test Insignum’s innovative corn traits in Beck’s elite varieties. The companies will collaborate to cross the trait into proprietary Beck’s genetics for field-testing in 2023 to evaluate commercial viability of the traits.
Insignum AgTech develops plant genetic traits that enable plants to “talk” and signal to farmers when specific plant stresses begin.
“With this trait, a corn plant generates purple pigment, indicating that a fungal infection has started but is not yet apparent. Additional traits will utilize other natural pigments, such as red or blue, that give an early indication of yield-limiting factors such as insect pests or fertility loss,” said Insignum Ag Tech CEO Kyle Mohler, a Purdue University alumnus. “Farmers will gain the ability to sustainably and precisely treat when and where needed, ultimately increasing yields without arbitrarily increasing costly inputs.”
As Insignum AgTech transitions from research to a commercial development phase, Mohler is pleased to collaborate with Beck’s, the largest family-owned retail seed company and the third-largest seed brand in the U.S.
“Beck’s values technology that helps farmers succeed,” said Tom Koch, research manager at Beck’s. “Insignum’s genetic traits are well aligned with that mission. Farmers can see what their plants need and then respond to improve crop health and yields. We were encouraged by Insignum’s results we saw in field trials last year, and we’re hopeful about this collaboration.”
Initial results of the trials will be available to select stakeholders at Insignum’s Field Demonstration Days in central Indiana in the fall.
In January 2022, Insignum AgTech received a $100,000 investment from the Purdue Ag-Celerator, an agriculture innovation fund. Ag-Celerator provides critical startup support for Purdue innovators who bring Purdue-patented intellectual property or Purdue “know-how” technologies to market. It is operated by the Purdue Foundry, with assistance from the Purdue College of Agriculture, the Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization and the agricultural industry.
Mohler earned his bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Purdue in 2007. He was a postdoctoral researcher at the university from 2015-18 before he founded Insignum AgTech in 2019.
About Insignum AgTech
Insignum AgTech creates biotechnology that enables plants to use their pigments to warn growers about plant stresses, such as disease, insect pests or low fertility. For more information, see insignum.ag.
About Beck’s
Beck's - Farmers At Heart® - revolutionized the customer seed buying experience by remaining true to a foundation built on faith, family, and farming. Founded in 1937, Beck's appreciates the farmers who have helped them become the largest family-owned retail seed company and the third-largest seed brand in the United States. The Beck family is now in its fifth generation of family members who work in the business to honor God and help farmers succeed. The Beck family and team of employees help farmers achieve success from generation to generation through authentic customer experiences, product diversity, seed quality, and performance. With a home office located in Atlanta, Ind., Beck's serves farmers throughout the Midwest and Mid-South. For more information about Beck's, visit http://www.beckshybrids.com/. Follow Beck’s on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, Twitter, and YouTube.
About Purdue Startup Foundry
Purdue Startup Foundry helps startups prepare for venture investment. The team works with early-stage startups looking for their first money in and prepares them to raise their first seed round. This is done by offering early-stage funding, entrepreneur-in-residence support, enhanced pitch coaching, graphic design services and an emphasis on increasing traction. The Startup Foundry supports two pitch competitions: the Black & Gold Awards, which invest $30,000 (Black Award) and $100,000 (Gold Award) in Purdue-affiliated startups. Ag-Celerator invests up to $100,000 into Purdue-affiliated startups with connections to the agriculture industry. Investments are awarded each semester. Purdue Startup Foundry also works closely with Purdue Ventures to support its portfolio companies and ensure coaching and advice mirrors what the investor network needs.
Media contact: Steve Martin, sgmartin@prf.org
Source: Kyle Mohler, kyle@insignumagtech.com
END
Insignum AgTech and Beck’s collaborate to help corn ‘talk’
Plant genetic innovation indicates if crops have been exposed to disease, insect pests or fertility loss
2023-04-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New study uncovers Colorado’s spicy ancient history of chili peppers
2023-04-21
Botanists and paleontologists, led by researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder, have identified a fossil chili pepper that may rewrite the geography and evolutionary timeline of the tomato plant family.
The team’s findings, published last month in the journal New Phytologist, show that the chili pepper tribe (Capsiceae) within the tomato, or nightshade (Solanaceae), family is much older and was much more widespread than previously thought. Scientists previously believed that chili peppers evolved in South America at most ...
360-million-year-old Irish fossil provides oldest evidence of plant self-defense in wood
2023-04-21
An international team of scientists, co-led by Dr Carla J. Harper, Assistant Professor in Botany in the School of Natural Sciences at Trinity, has discovered the oldest evidence of plant self-defence in wood in a 360-million-year-old fossil from south-eastern Ireland.
Plants can protect their wood from infection and water loss by forming special structures called “tyloses”. These prevent bacterial and fungal pathogens from getting into the heartwood of living trees and damaging it. However, it was not previously known how early in the evolution of plants woody species became capable of forming such defences.
Published ...
New paper advances understanding of geographic health disparities
2023-04-21
By looking at where people were born instead of where they ultimately move to and die, geographic disparities in mortality look different than previously assumed, according to a new study published on April 1, 2023, in the journal Demography.
interstate migration may mitigate regional inequalities in mortality according to “Understanding Geographic Disparities in Mortality,” a paper led by Jason Fletcher, professor in the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and director of the Center for Demography of Health and Aging with an appointment in Population Health Sciences.
“At a time when nearly ...
Newly funded Morris Animal Foundation study assesses CBD use for postsurgical pain in dogs
2023-04-21
DENVER/April 21, 2023 – A new study is testing whether the addition of CBD can improve pain management in dogs following orthopedic surgery. The study, funded by Morris Animal Foundation, will be conducted by a veterinary research team at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
CBD use in pets has gained in popularity in the last decade, but there are few controlled studies closely examining its efficacy as a pain management tool. This study hopes to help partially close this knowledge gap.
The research team, led by Dr. Alan Chicoine, Assistant Professor, Department ...
Endocrine Society endorses bipartisan bill to address insulin affordability
2023-04-21
WASHINGTON—The Endocrine Society today endorsed the Improving Needed Safeguards for Users of Lifesaving Insulin Now (INSULIN) Act of 2023, a bipartisan insulin affordability bill introduced by Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Susan Collins (R-ME). This legislation would cap out-of-pocket insulin costs for those with private insurance, ensure patients can share in insulin rebates and discounts, and promote competition in the insulin market.
These measures would protect access to life-saving insulin for more than 7 million people nationwide who rely on the medication to manage their diabetes. According to the U.S. Center for Disease Control ...
Biological age is increased by stress and restored upon recovery
2023-04-21
The biological age of humans and mice undergoes a rapid increase in response to diverse forms of stress, which is reversed following recovery from stress, according to a study publishing on April 21 in the journal Cell Metabolism. These changes occur over relatively short time periods of days or months, according to multiple independent epigenetic aging clocks.
“This finding of fluid, fluctuating, malleable age challenges the longstanding conception of a unidirectional upward trajectory of biological age over the life course,” says co-senior study author James White of Duke University School of Medicine. “Previous reports ...
Most people feel “psychologically close” to climate change
2023-04-21
When spurring action against climate change, NGOs and governmental agencies frequently operate on the assumption that people are unmotivated to act because they view climate change as a problem that affects distant regions far in the future. While this concept, known as psychological distance, seems intuitive, researchers report in the journal One Earth on April 21 that most people see climate change as an important and timely issue even if its impacts are not immediately noticeable.
“There is no consistent evidence ...
The Mathematics of Cell Boundary 'Ruggedness'
2023-04-21
Fukuoka, Japan—Researchers have uncovered both the mathematical and biological mechanism behind the rugged structures at cell boundaries found in tissues such as the kidneys and nasal glands. The team hopes that their new insights can help develop new ways of treating associated pathologies and build better biological models for future study.
Our cells come in all sorts of shapes and sizes. From the neurons that extend across the central nervous system, to the spherical white blood cells that protect us from infection, a cell's form and ...
Effect of COVID-19 pandemic on food insecurity and inability to pay rent hit immigrant families hardest, Drexel study finds
2023-04-21
Under embargo until April 21, 2023
Although families with immigrant mothers experienced higher rates of food insecurity and inability to pay rent during the pandemic than other groups, they reported less participation in economic impact payments (EIP) in the form of stimulus checks and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) – two programs designed to provide stopgap financial support, according to a new study in JAMA Health Forum from researchers at the Dornsife School of Public Health and Children’s HealthWatch.
The team surveyed 1,396 caregivers in Boston, ...
Firearms injure or kill up to a quarter of juvenile justice youth after detention
2023-04-21
CHICAGO – A new study by Northwestern University found that among youth who had entered juvenile detention, one-quarter of Black and Hispanic males were later injured or killed by firearms within 16 years.
While the nation’s youth and young adults are disproportionately affected by the daily occurrence of 100 firearm deaths and 234 non-fatal firearm injuries, youth who have been previously involved with the juvenile justice system had up to 23 times the rate of firearm mortality than the general population.
The study is the first to focus on the incidence rate of firearm injuries and death within the juvenile justice population.
“Who ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
DNA evidence rewrites histories for people buried in volcanic eruption in ancient Pompeii
People with schizophrenia show distinct brain activity when faced with conflicting information
Climate change: Significant increase in carbon dioxide emissions from private aviation
Planting trees in the Arctic could make global warming worse, not better, say scientists
Finding function for noncoding RNAs using a new kind of CRISPR
Neurodevelopment in the first 2 years of life following prenatal exposure to maternal SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Racial disparities in genetic detection rates for inherited retinal diseases
Stem cells shed insight into cardiovascular disease processes
New study: Plastics pollution worsen the impacts of all Planetary Boundaries
Long-term risks from prostate cancer treatment detailed in new report
Does more virtual care mean more low-value care? Study suggests no
City of Hope Research Spotlight, October 2024
Increased focus on comorbidities, socioeconomic factors would help improve health equity for people with COPD
Gut dysbiosis and fecal microbiota transplantation in pancreatic cancer: Current status and perspectives
Prevalence of unrecognized cognitive impairment in socially and economically vulnerable older adults is high
Men who have sex with men in Europe still vulnerable to hepatitis A and B, highlighting need for public health action and support
Cancer genetic risk assessment guidelines expand to meet growing understanding of hereditary risk
Advances in screening and early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer
Metabolic dysregulation and metabolite imbalances in acute-on-chronic liver failure: Impact on immune status
Elite coaches see compassion as a path to better performance
Microplastics impact cloud formation, likely affecting weather and climate
ECOG-ACRIN and PrECOG announce multiple presentations at ASH 2024
Off-the-shelf thermoelectric generators can upgrade CO2 into chemicals. The combination could help us colonize Mars
What makes human culture unique?
Researchers discover dozens of new genes associated with disc herniations
Research shows caterpillar fungus can slow down growth of cancer cells
Tanning bed access and usage is driving higher rates of melanoma in specific regions
Mitochondrial dysfunction research transforms mental health: Dr. Ana Andreazza's vision
Dr. Nora Volkow shares insights on addiction science and harm reduction in Genomic Press interview
25-year study reveals key factors in healthy brain aging and cognitive performance
[Press-News.org] Insignum AgTech and Beck’s collaborate to help corn ‘talk’Plant genetic innovation indicates if crops have been exposed to disease, insect pests or fertility loss