Wednesday, 03-06-2026 | 08:26
Aflatoxin contamination caused by Aspergillus flavus threatens the development of peanut industry, breeding aflatoxin-resistant peanut varieties are highly needed. In this study, a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population was developed from a cross between Zhonghua 16 and Kainong H03-3—a high-oleic acid peanut line exhibiting resistance to both A. flavus infection and aflatoxin production. Using this RIL population,
Updated News
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- ICRISAT Accelerated Crop Improvement (ACI) Overview
- Reviving Water, Restoring Landscapes: Livelihoods Improved After Six Years of Measurable Change in Central India
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- ICRISAT Unveils New Identity for its Center of Excellence for South-South Cooperation in Agriculture
- Plant Health for Food Security: ICRISAT’s Integrated Approach to Grain Legume Disease Management
- What will it take to make food systems work for women?
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Scientific news
- Genetic mapping and diagnostic marker development for a co-localization interval conferring resistance to both Aspergillus flavus infection and aflatoxin production in peanut
- AI-designed OpenCRISPR-1 performs robust knockout, base editing, and prime editing in rice
- The effector NlOBP1b from the brown planthopper suppresses rice immunity by manipulating the OsCK2 complex
- OsCBL10 negatively regulates salt tolerance at seedling stage in rice
- Water stress tolerance, genomic selection and identification of genomic regions in a MAGIC population of eggplant
- Rorippa islandica is a genetically accessible dicot model system to study flooding tolerance
- Genetic dissection of oil content in maize kernel using combined genome-wide association analysis and linkage mapping
- A candidate gene marker at the red kidney color locus (Rk) enables the development of slow-darkening pink beans
- Breeding for next-generation biotic stress-tolerant pigeonpea for sustainable food legume production
- Reprogramming immunity: TAL effector-informed genome editing in rice and other crops
- Molecular and metabolic regulation of anthocyanin accumulation under phosphorus stress in purple-fleshed sweet potato
- Comprehensive analysis of VOZ proteins in sweet potato and related species reveals their evolutionary dynamics and responses to abiotic stresses
- Subsurface soil inorganic carbon gains offset half of surface losses in China’s upland croplands over the last four decades
- Metabolomics and transcriptomics analyses reveal quality differences in forage-grain ratoon rice under varying mowing stages
- Multiplexed CRISPR base editing enables pulse-activated irreversible biocontainment of engineered bacteria Open Access
Wednesday, 03-06-2026 | 01:24
A new study used CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to develop bovine muscle cells without alpha-gal, a sugar molecule linked to Alpha-Gal Syndrome (AGS), a potentially life-threatening allergy triggered by mammalian meat. The study presents a proof of concept for producing cultivated meat that may be safer for people affected by the condition.
Wednesday, 03-06-2026 | 01:26
Aflatoxin contamination caused by Aspergillus flavus threatens the development of peanut industry, breeding aflatoxin-resistant peanut varieties are highly needed. In this study, a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population was developed from a cross between Zhonghua 16 and Kainong H03-3—a high-oleic acid peanut line exhibiting resistance to both A. flavus infection and aflatoxin production. Using this RIL population,
Wednesday, 03-06-2026 | 01:25
Genome editing has emerged as one of the most transformative biotechnological tools for modern agriculture, which enable precise crop improvement with unprecedented speed and accuracy. However, all currently available plant genome editing systems are derived from naturally occurring bacterial or archaeal proteins. In addition, the two most widely used genome editing platforms, Cas9 and Cas12, are protected by complex intellectual property frameworks, limiting their global accessibility and commercial deployment in some regions.




















