PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers develop new tools to turn grain crops into biosensors

Plant-based detection systems could be used to monitor chemical exposure in agricultural settings

2026-01-06
(Press-News.org) ST. LOUIS, MO, January 6, 2026 — A collaborative team of researchers from the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, the University of Florida, Gainesville and University of Iowa have developed groundbreaking tools that allow grasses—including major grain crops like corn—to act as living biosensors capable of detecting minute amounts of chemicals in the field.

Principal Investigators Dmitri Nusinow, PhD, and Malia Gehan, PhD, led the effort to engineer grasses that produce a visible purple pigment, anthocyanin, in response to specific chemical cues. When paired with advanced imaging and analytical systems, these plants can report extremely low levels of chemical exposure, pollution, or other adverse conditions that may impact crop and human health.

Their findings, Remote Sensing of Endogenous Pigmentation by Inducible Synthetic Circuits in Grasses, were recently published in the Plant Biotechnology Journal.

Turning Plants Into “Sentinels”

“What if plants could alert farmers to adverse conditions or unwanted chemicals?” posited the research team. Although researchers have begun exploring plant-based biosensors, most tools have been developed in dicot species such as Arabidopsis thaliana. Grass species—monocots—have lagged behind despite being the foundation of global grain production. Plant pigments, such as carotenoids, betalains and anthocyanins are being adapted as non-invasive visual reporters to monitor gene expression in plants.

Nusinow and Gehan successfully adapted a ligand-inducible genetic circuit that activates the plant’s own anthocyanin pathway in the C4 model grass Setaria viridis. These new tools could be used to trigger grasses like corn to make a purple pigment, anthocyanin, when exposed to specific chemicals.

Key advances include:

Identification of two transcription factors that can be co-expressed from a single transcript to trigger anthocyanin production.

Demonstration of both constitutive and ligand-inducible pigment production in protoplasts and whole plants.

Development of hyperspectral imaging and discriminative analysis techniques that non-destructively detect pigmentation changes from a near-remote distance.

Together, these advancements demonstrate a robust system for precise, remote sensing of chemical exposure in grasses—paving the way for crop plants that can actively communicate environmental conditions.

“Grain crops are at the heart of global food security,” said Nusinow. “Having plants act as sentinels in the field could increase food security and improve the sustainability of agriculture.” 

This research represents an important step toward plant-based monitoring systems capable of detecting contamination, chemical drift, or other environmental factors that influence crop performance. As detection tools become more sophisticated, the ability for plants to “report” their own stressors could transform agricultural management and resilience.

Tools Available for Community Use

In support of open science, both the molecular tools to build these sensors for grasses, and the methods for sensitive detection of changes in pigmentation have been deposited into public repositories enabling other scientists to build on this work and accelerate innovation in plant synthetic biology.

“We wanted to build a system that other researchers could easily use. Making our constructs and imaging approaches publicly available will accelerate innovation across the community,” said Gehan.

Collaborators on the project included, Alina Zare, PhD, professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, director, Artificial Intelligence and Informatics Research Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville; and Susan Meerdink, PhD, assistant professor, School for Earth, Environment, and Sustainability, University of Iowa. This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, HR001118C01327.

About the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center
Founded in 1998, the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center is a nonprofit research institute with a mission to improve the human condition through plant science. The Center’s research, education and outreach efforts focus on food security and environmental sustainability, positioning the 

St. Louis region as a global leader in plant science. The Center is supported by funding from organizations such as the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Department of Agriculture, The Gates Foundation and the generosity of individuals, corporation and foundation donors. For more information, visit danforthcenter.org.

For more information contact:
Karla Roeber, Vice President, Public and Government Affairs, kroeber@danforthcenter.org

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Do supervised consumption sites bring increased crime? Study suggests that’s a myth

2026-01-06
Overdose prevention sites and supervised consumption sites in Toronto are not associated with long-term increases in local crime, McGill University researchers have found. Over 10 years, crime reports remained stable or declined in neighbourhoods where sites opened, the researchers said. Their findings land amid debates across Canada about how harm reduction services intersect with public health and safety. “Opposition from the public and policymakers has often centred on neighbourhood safety and decline. We wanted to find out whether the data supported those claims,” said Dimitra Panagiotoglou, an associate professor in McGill’s ...

New mass spec innovation could transform research

2026-01-06
Weight says a lot. In the kitchen, it could mean cooking with too little or too much of an ingredient. For scientists, a molecule’s weight can help determine its makeup. This, in turn, can shed light on whether a potential drug is acting on the body or not working at all. Weight can even reveal what tumors are made of, potentially influencing treatment options. For measures like this and more, researchers turn to a technique called mass spectrometry. “A mass spectrometer is essentially a very precise scale,” says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) Research Associate Professor Paolo ...

Maternal nativity, race, and ethnicity and infant mortality in the US

2026-01-06
About The Study: This population-based cohort study found that U.S.-born individuals had significantly higher odds of infant mortality compared with non–U.S.-born individuals, particularly among full-term births and among those self-identifying as Black, Hispanic, white, or more than 1 race. Sudden unexpected infant death was a major contributor to these disparities. Investigation into the underlying factors contributing to these disparities is needed. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Giulia M. Muraca, MPH, PhD, email muracag@mcmaster.ca. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.52230) Editor’s ...

Migration-related trauma among asylum seekers exposed to the migrant protection protocols

2026-01-06
About The Study: In this cohort study, exposure to Migrant Protection Protocols was associated with higher rates of trauma during migration among asylum seekers. Such policies may be associated with adverse health outcomes for asylum seekers, with potential downstream implications for U.S. public health and security. The Migrant Protection Protocols were introduced in January 2019 and changed U.S. asylum procedures by requiring certain asylum seekers to remain in Mexico while awaiting immigration proceedings. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kyle Joyner, MD, email kyle.joyner@med.usc.edu. To ...

Jupiter’s moon Europa has a seafloor that may be quiet and lifeless

2026-01-06
By Chris Woolston The giant planet Jupiter has nearly 100 known moons, yet none have captured the interest and imagination of astronomers and space scientists quite like Europa, an ice-shrouded world that is thought to possess a vast ocean of liquid salt water. For decades, scientists have wondered whether that ocean could harbor the right conditions for life, placing Europa near the top of the list of solar system bodies to explore. A new study led by Paul Byrne, an associate professor of Earth, environmental, and planetary sciences, throws cold water on the idea that Europa could ...

SwRI upgrades nuclear magnetic resonance laboratory for pharmaceutical R&D

2026-01-06
SAN ANTONIO — January 6, 2026 – Southwest Research Institute has upgraded its nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) laboratory to offer robust chemical analysis of organic compounds used in drug discovery and development. Through internally funded research, SwRI used the new laboratory to compare quantitative NMR (qNMR) to high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), a conventional method used to determine the purity of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). SwRI’s research found that qNMR can be ...

House sparrows in northern Norway can help us save other endangered animals

2026-01-06
Researchers are trying to understand why some wild species do better than others over time, as the environment changes. Researcher Kenneth Aase's research focuses on a new mathematical approach that could shed light on this question, which in turn could move us closer to understanding the loss of biological diversity. Aase is a statistician and a PhD research fellow at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU's) Department of Mathematical Sciences. He is associated with the GPWILD ...

Crohn's & Colitis Foundation survey reveals more than 1/3 of young adults with IBD face step therapy insurance barriers

2026-01-06
NEW YORK, NY – January 6, 2026 – The Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation today revealed compelling new research pointing to major healthcare access challenges and financial burdens disproportionately affecting young adults with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). The national survey, conducted by the Foundation, assessed healthcare and financial experiences across three groups: young adults aged 18-25, adults aged 26-64, and caregivers of pediatric patients under 18. The findings, published today in Crohn’s & Colitis 360, are based on ...

Tethered UAV autonomous knotting on environmental structures for transport

2026-01-06
“Cable-driven systems excel at heavy-load transport but are limited by fixed anchoring points in unstructured environments,” explained study corresponding author Lihua Xie from Nanyang Technological University. The core innovations include (a) a human-in-the-loop knot planner integrating enclosing plane extraction, frontier-based path search, and knotting trajectory generation; (b) three key optimization metrics (enclosing planarity, tether visibility, tether clearance) ensuring task reliability; and (c) seamless integration of UAV mobility and winch load-bearing capability. “This system enables ...

Decentralized social media platforms unlock authentic consumer feedback

2026-01-06
PULLMAN, Wash. — Businesses looking for clearer insight into how consumers truly feel about their products, campaigns or brand decisions may find more authentic reactions on decentralized social media platforms, according to new research from Washington State University. The study, which was published in the European Journal of Marketing, found that people express stronger emotions and engage in less self-censorship on decentralized platforms than on traditional, centralized sites. Centralized platforms — such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and X, formerly Twitter — are owned and operated by single corporations that control content and user data. Decentralized platforms ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Children born with upper limb difference show the incredible adaptability of the young brain

How bacteria can reclaim lost energy, nutrients, and clean water from wastewater

Fast-paced lives demand faster vision: ecology shapes how “quickly” animals see time

Global warming and heat stress risk close in on the Tour de France

New technology reveals hidden DNA scaffolding built before life ‘switches on’

New study reveals early healthy eating shapes lifelong brain health

Trashing cancer’s ‘undruggable’ proteins

Industrial research labs were invented in Europe but made the U.S. a tech superpower

Enzymes work as Maxwell's demon by using memory stored as motion

Methane’s missing emissions: The underestimated impact of small sources

Beating cancer by eating cancer

How sleep disruption impairs social memory: Oxytocin circuits reveal mechanisms and therapeutic opportunities

Natural compound from pomegranate leaves disrupts disease-causing amyloid

A depression treatment that once took eight weeks may work just as well in one

New study calls for personalized, tiered approach to postpartum care

The hidden breath of cities: Why we need to look closer at public fountains

Rewetting peatlands could unlock more effective carbon removal using biochar

Microplastics discovered in prostate tumors

ACES marks 150 years of the Morrow Plots, our nation's oldest research field

Physicists open door to future, hyper-efficient ‘orbitronic’ devices

$80 million supports research into exceptional longevity

Why the planet doesn’t dry out together: scientists solve a global climate puzzle

Global greening: The Earth’s green wave is shifting

You don't need to be very altruistic to stop an epidemic

Signs on Stone Age objects: Precursor to written language dates back 40,000 years

MIT study reveals climatic fingerprints of wildfires and volcanic eruptions

A shift from the sandlot to the travel team for youth sports

Hair-width LEDs could replace lasers

The hidden infections that refuse to go away: how household practices can stop deadly diseases

Ochsner MD Anderson uses groundbreaking TIL therapy to treat advanced melanoma in adults

[Press-News.org] Researchers develop new tools to turn grain crops into biosensors
Plant-based detection systems could be used to monitor chemical exposure in agricultural settings