Sunday, 10-05-2026 | 05:34
Bacterial leaf blight (BLB), caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), is one of the most devastating diseases threatening global rice production. In recent decades, a range of disease resistance genes have been identified in rice. These genes are involved in complex molecular mechanisms, such as the activation of immune receptors and defense signaling pathways, which trigger the plant's immune response to combat pathogen invasion. Some of these genes have been successfully applied in molecular breeding to develop new disease-resistant varieties.
Updated News
- Biotech Updates Now Available in Korean Language
- 2024 Biotech Facts and Trends: Asia & Oceania
- Study Shows Mitochondria Can Make New Organelles
- Researchers Reveal How Plants Hit the Reset Button After Stress
- Extreme heat is pushing agrifood systems to the brink worldwide
- Hunger intensifies in South Sudan as 7.8 million people face high acute food insecurity and 2.2 million children suffer acute malnutrition
- UN SOFI: 673 Million People Experienced Hunger in 2024
- Bangladesh’s new agriculture minister signals push for next-generation rice as partnership with IRRI deepens
- 2026 ECOSOC Financing for Development Forum
- Agricultural innovation as strategic investment for the U.S. (Agri-Pulse)
- AfricaRice and IITA: A Strategic Alliance Transforming Africa's Food Systems Through Science
- Rangelands under pressure: how CGIAR science is strengthening pastoral resilience
- FAO Regional Conference for Asia and the Pacific aims at “resilience from within”
- Tasmania Revises Gene Technology Policy
- Extreme heat is pushing agrifood systems to the brink worldwide
Scientific news
- Resistance gene against Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo) in rice: molecular mechanisms and breeding strategies for bacterial leaf blight
- Emergence of Bacterial Leaf Blight of Rice in Madagascar: A Recent Introduction from Asia
- A Non-Host Pathogen Elicitor Induces Blast Resistance Mediated by OsNAC78-Pir7b Module in Rice
- Calcium signaling in crops
- A combination of QTL mapping and genome wide association study revealed key genes for heat tolerance in maize
- Identification of candidate genes for deep-sowing tolerance in rice by genome-wide association study and transcriptome sequencing
- A magnesium efflux transporter required for seed development and eating quality in rice
- Systemic defense signaling in Austrian pine
- Soil organic nitrogen rather than fertilizer drives dinitrogen losses in flooded rice systems
- Genome-wide association study of soybean germplasm derived from modern Canadian and Chinese soybean cultivars to identify novel genes conferring soybean cyst nematode resistance
- ABC transporter BrABCG12 mutation results in tender green glossy leaves in Chinese cabbage
- Metabolomic modelling of sensory characteristics and consumer liking in papaya fruit
- Total flavones from Abelmoschus manihot (L.) Medik. [Malvaceae] extract ameliorates diabetic liver injury: association with ferroptosis suppression and the PI3K/AKT/Nrf2 pathway
- Toward sustainable control of phyto-nematodes: integrating lessons from crops to advance genetic modification in tomato
- Comparative Metabolomic Profiling of Resistant and Susceptible Coffea arabica Accessions to Bacterial Pathogen Infection
Saturday, 09-05-2026 | 22:35
The ISAAA e-newsletter, Biotech Updates, is officially expanding its accessibility within Asia. The latest news and research highlights on agricultural biotechnology are now available in Korean, marking a significant step in its regional growth.To better serve a diverse audience and reach more readers in the region, Biotech Updates provides translations in several key languages:
Saturday, 09-05-2026 | 22:34
Bacterial leaf blight (BLB), caused by Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), is one of the most devastating diseases threatening global rice production. In recent decades, a range of disease resistance genes have been identified in rice. These genes are involved in complex molecular mechanisms, such as the activation of immune receptors and defense signaling pathways, which trigger the plant's immune response to combat pathogen invasion. Some of these genes have been successfully applied in molecular breeding to develop new disease-resistant varieties.
Saturday, 09-05-2026 | 22:35
A research team led by Professor Sung-min Son of Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology (KAIST), in collaboration with the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) and the Gladstone Institutes, has developed a new CRISPR-based diagnostic tool that can detect and distinguish multiple viruses in a single test by analyzing how quickly gene editing proteins react. The study introduces a method that uses reaction speed as a unique signal to identify different viruses, including COVID-19 and influenza.




















