Energy News
FARM NEWS
Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation
illustration only

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

by George Watson
Lubbock, Texas (SPX) Nov 6, 2025
A team of plant biotechnologists led by Gunvant Patil at Texas Tech University has developed a groundbreaking method that could dramatically speed up the development of regeneration process and gene-edited crops.

The method would allow scientists to bypass one of the most time-consuming and technically challenging steps in plant biotechnology - tissue culture.

The study, published this week in Molecular Plant, introduces a synthetic regeneration system that enables plants to grow new shoots directly from wounded tissue, eliminating the need for traditional lab-based regeneration steps that often take months and limit which crops can be bioengineered. This work was primarily carried out by graduate student Arjun Ojha Kshetry in Texas Tech's Institute of Genomics for Crop Abiotic Stress Tolerance (IGCAST).

"Plant regeneration has always been the bottleneck in biotechnology," said Patil, lead senior author and associate professor in IGCAST. "Our approach unlocks the plant's own natural ability to regrow after injury, allowing us to directly induce new, gene-edited shoots without spending months in tissue culture. This could fundamentally change how we develop improved crops."

In most genetic engineering methods, researchers must regenerate a whole plant from a single cell using precise nutrient and hormone combinations, a slow, expensive and often genotype-dependent process. Patil's team instead engineered a simple system that reactivates the plant's own wound-healing and regeneration pathways.

By combining two powerful genes - WIND1, which triggers cells near a wound to reprogram themselves, and the isopentenyl transferase (IPT) gene, which produces natural plant hormones promoting new shoot growth - the team created a self-contained regeneration cascade. This system successfully generated gene-edited shoots in multiple crops, including tobacco, tomatoes and soybeans.

"This system works like turning on a hidden switch in the plant," Patil said. "When we activate the wound-response genes, the plant essentially starts rebuilding itself, this time carrying the desired genetic changes."

The new technique also integrates with Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR)-based genome editing tools, enabling precise gene modifications in a single step. The ability to generate transgenic, or gene-edited, plants directly on the parent plant could make crop improvement faster, cheaper and accessible to a wider range of species.

"This is a significant step toward democratizing plant biotechnology," said Luis Herrera-Estrella, a co-author, director of IGCAST and the President's Distinguished Professor of Plant Genomics at Texas Tech. "By reducing dependence on tissue culture and specialized lab facilities, this system could make genetic innovation possible for many more crops and research programs worldwide."

The study demonstrates higher regeneration success rates in tobacco and tomatoes using the new system, outperforming many existing tissue culture-free transformation methods. Even in soybeans, a notoriously difficult species for genetic modification, the researchers achieved gene-editing with minimal reliance on conventional tissue culture.

"The development of a tissue-culture-free transformation system represents a major leap forward for agricultural research," said Clint Krehbiel, dean of the Davis College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources. "This breakthrough not only accelerates crop improvement but also demonstrates how our faculty and students are addressing some of the most pressing challenges in global food security and sustainable production."

The research marks a major milestone in plant synthetic biology and positions Texas Tech at the forefront of sustainable agricultural innovation. Future work will focus on adapting this approach to other major food and energy crops, including cereals and legumes, and integrating it with precision genome editing technologies to accelerate breeding for global food security.

"Our ultimate goal is to develop a universal platform for plant transformation, one that cuts the time from discovery to improved crop variety by half or more," Patil said. "This has implications not only for research, but also for tackling real-world challenges like environmental resilience, disease resistance and improved nutrient use efficiency."

Postdoctoral scientist Kaushik Ghose and Vikas Devkar, working in Patil's lab, also contributed to this work.

Research Report:A synthetic transcription cascade enables direct in planta shoot regeneration for transgenesis and gene editing in multiple plants

Related Links
Institute of Genomics for Crop Abiotic Stress Tolerance
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
FARM NEWS
Why an Amazon chef said no to a vegan dinner for Prince William event
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil (AFP) Nov 4, 2025
Saulo Jennings, a chef from Brazil's Amazon region, is so passionate about the rainforest's flavors - like the massive pirarucu fish - that he refused to cater a vegan dinner at an environmental awards ceremony hosted by Britain's Prince William. The 47-year-old chef is, however, ready to impress heads of state at the COP30 meeting in the Amazon this week with an immersive dinner showcasing both plant and animal ingredients from the world's largest rainforest. Jennings was appointed a UN gastr ... read more

FARM NEWS
Illinois team creates aviation fuel from food waste with circular economy benefits

Industrial microbe enables conversion of carbon monoxide to ethanol

Revolutionary microbe enables resilient renewable energy from food waste

Finnish carbon-neutral ferry aims to set global benchmark for shipping

FARM NEWS
China emissions flat in third quarter as solar surges: study

PolyU team advances tandem solar cell efficiency and reliability targets

Enhanced solar water splitting achieved with MoS2 GaN nanorod heterostructures

Graphene solar cells promise long-lasting self-powered sensor networks

FARM NEWS
S.Africa seeks to save birds from wind turbine risks

Vertical wind turbines may soon power UK railways using tunnel airflow

Danish wind giant Orsted to cut workforce by a quarter

French-German duo wins mega offshore wind energy project

FARM NEWS
'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight

Brazil's 'action agenda' at COP30 takes shape

Will EU's carbon border tax crash COP30 party?

China emissions peak likely closer to 2028: expert survey

FARM NEWS
High precision measurement advances fusion plasma diagnostics

Mechanical power by linking Earth's warmth to space

Recharge reactor extracts lithium from EV battery waste for direct reuse

AI energy demand in US proves minor climate impact

FARM NEWS
Light pollution disrupts carbon cycle balance across continents

Countries agree to end mercury tooth fillings by 2034

'I miss breathing': Delhi protesters demand action on pollution

UK water firm says 'highly likely' behind plastic pellet pollution incident

FARM NEWS
EU airlines agree to drop misleading climate claims

Venezuela announces big military deployment to counter US presence

Greece woos US energy deals, as eco groups cry foul

Leaders turn up the heat on fossil fuels at Amazon climate summit

FARM NEWS
NASA's ESCAPADE mission to Mars - twin UC Berkeley satellites dubbed Blue and Gold - will launch in early November

Yeast demonstrates survival skills under Mars conditions

Are there living microbes on Mars? Check the ice

Blocks of dry ice carve gullies on Martian dunes through explosive sublimation

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2026 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.