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Agriculture Division of DowDuPont, ICRISAT and Corteva Agriscience Partner to Improve Crops

The plan to work together on crops such as sorghum and millet was solidified at a meeting during the 2017 World Food Prize where ICRISAT Director General David Bergvinson and Tom Greene of Corteva Agriscience™ outlined general research concepts, targets and available technology that would help drive solutions.

KJ Staff

The plan to work together on crops such as sorghum and millet was solidified at a meeting during the 2017 World Food Prize where ICRISAT Director General David Bergvinson and Tom Greene of Corteva Agriscience™ outlined general research concepts, targets and available technology that would help drive solutions. The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and Corteva Agriscience™, Agriculture Division of DowDuPont,  inked a multiyear partnership to strengthen food security by improving crops that feed millions through sharing of high-tech and modern breeding technologies.

DuPont Pioneer, now part of Corteva Agriscience™, will provide access to intellectual property, material and know-how related to CRISPR-Cas and plant transformation.

“Collaboration will bring together expertise and experience that complements each other. Once we started discussions on the research plan, the collaboration came together quickly,” said Amitabh Mohanty, Principal Investigator, Corteva Agriscience™, and co-developer of the research plan.

Corteva Agriscience™ is applying CRISPR-Cas as an advanced plant breeding tool to develop crops with greater environmental resiliency, productivity and sustainability. It has defined CRISPR-Cas guiding principles, which includes enabling others wanting to develop agricultural products using CRISPR-Cas by providing access to its intellectual property, technology capabilities, infrastructure and scientific expertise.

A Master Alliance Agreement (MAA) was signed between Peter Carberry, Director General (Acting), ICRISAT, and Tom Greene, Senior Research Director, Corteva Agriscience™. The technology sharing includes CRISPR-Cas gene editing, adapting transformation techniques to new crops, and applying knowledge of plant biochemical pathways with the goal of productivity and quality improvements for crops that feed millions of people. Carberry, who is also the Director of Global CGIAR Research Program on Grain Legumes and Dryland Cereals (GLDC), said: “ICRISAT and Corteva Agriscience™ share goals of developing innovative technologies and promoting their translation into next-generation agricultural products to benefit the smallholder agriculture farmers in the drylands. Such public-private partnerships are actively sought and are critical to achieving the desired impact and success of the GLDC Program.”

Tom Greene, Corteva Agriscience™, said: “We look forward to applying the cutting-edge technology, like CRISPR-Cas, to address challenging crop production and consumer-facing quality problems. The combination of experience from our scientists and refinement of new technologies offer promising areas of research and development for select crops that don’t receive enough attention, even though these crops feed millions.”

“With Corteva Agriscience™ and ICRISAT scientists working together we will see a rapid improvement in technologies towards developing more productive crops and more prosperous agriculture for smallholder farmers,” said Pooja Bhatnagar-Mathur, Principal Investigator, ICRISAT and co-developer of the research plan.

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