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Cibus and John Innes Centre announce ongoing collaboration with potential to revolutionize fertilizer use in farming


San Diego, California, USA 
June 12, 2025

  • Researchers at the John Innes Centre (JIC) have discovered a genetic mutation with the potential to enhance nutrient uptake and reduce the need for artificial fertilizers
  • Cibus and JIC have agreed on a collaboration with the potential to introduce the trait into several commercial crops
  • Cibus previously announced the successful editing of Canola plants with this mutation and looks forward to further testing and trait validation

Cibus, Inc. ("Cibus" or the "Company") (Nasdaq: CBUS), a leading agricultural technology company that develops and licenses plant traits to seed companies for royalties, today confirmed its continuing collaboration with the John Innes Centre (JIC). Cibus applauds the JIC breakthrough discovery, published earlier this year in the journal Nature, of a biological mechanism that makes plant roots more welcoming to beneficial soil microbes. Cibus and JIC have been collaborating to translate JIC’s discovery into a nutrient use efficiency (NUE) trait for a number of crops, including canola/oilseed rape. If successfully developed, the NUE trait would lead to improved nutrient uptake thereby reducing the use of nitrate and phosphate fertilizers without compromising yields.

“Our findings hold great potential for advancing sustainable agriculture. It is unexpected and exciting that we have discovered a mechanism that enhances plant-microbe interactions that can boost nutrient uptake in farming conditions. We have been very pleased to work with Cibus towards the development of a trait offering more sustainable production of economically important crops alongside reduced use of inorganic fertilizers,” stated Dr. Myriam Charpentier, JIC scientist and lead author of the Nature paper.

Dr. Steve Sanders, Vice President External Collaborations commented, “We are very excited about our collaboration with Dr. Charpentier and the talented scientific team at JIC as we continue to leverage our respective capabilities to help translate their discovery toward a trait offering improved nutrient uptake benefiting farmers around the world. With only about one-third of applied fertilizer typically absorbed by a plant, the JIC discovery could enable more productive, sustainable and profitable crops through the use of less fertilizer.”

About Nutrient Use Efficiency

Cibus' objective for nutrient use efficiency (NUE) traited plants is to enable lower fertilizer use while maintaining or improving expected crop yields. Nutrients, like nitrates and phosphates, are essential for plant growth. Each plant species has specific nutrient requirements to grow and thrive and this is one of the primary determinants of crop yield. However, many soils are naturally low in nutrients and crops deplete soil nutrient content as they grow, leading to the need to fertilize those soils. This is in addition to leaching of nutrients from the soil or fertilizer overuse, which can lead to the pollution of the environment. With plants themselves being inefficient at using the nutrients to which they have access, an effective NUE trait in those plants would enable more efficient nutrient uptake. This could result in less fertilizer use and in turn lead to more productive and profitable crops with reduced environmental impacts.

About the John Innes Centre

The John Innes Centre (“JIC”) is a world-leading international centre of excellence in plant science and microbiology. The JIC’s mission is to generate knowledge of plants and microbes through fundamental research and to use this knowledge to benefit agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being. They train excellent scientists for the future and engage with policy makers and the public. Their joint strategy with The Sainsbury Laboratory – Healthy Plants, Healthy People, Healthy Planet (HP³) – outlines their vision for delivering a safer, healthier and more sustainable future through the power of plant and microbial science. In collaboration with world-leading academic partners, they are uniquely positioned to lead the fundamental scientific advances needed to address three intertwined, era-defining challenges: feeding the world, global health threats, and climate change.

About Cibus

Cibus is a leader in gene edited productivity traits that address critical productivity and sustainability challenges for farmers such as diseases and pests which the United Nations estimates cost the global economy approximately $300 billion annually. Cibus’ long-term focus is productivity traits for major, large-acreage row crops. Cibus is not a seed company. It is a technology company that uses proprietary high-throughput gene editing technology to develop crop traits at a fraction of the time and cost of conventional breeding and to license them to seed companies in exchange for royalties on seed sales.

 



More news from:
    . Cibus Global LLC
    . John Innes Centre


Website: http://www.seedquest.com/yellowpages/americas/usa/c/cibus/default.htm

Published: June 13, 2025

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