TechAccel, UC Davis lab developing wheat seed to combat climate change
March 12, 2018 | Leah Wankum
A Kansas City-based tech and venture development firm hopes to engineer wheat seeds that produce higher yield by withstanding warmer temperatures.
“We’re taking a concept that is pretty important for wheat worldwide,” said Brad Fabbri, Chief Science Officer of TechAccel.
Increasing temperatures make growing wheat more difficult across the globe, studies show. Reports indicate climate change is already slowing wheat yield gains; for each degree Celsius of temperature increase, global wheat production is estimated to fall by 6 percent.
TechAccel LLC recently initiated a protein engineering research project with The Siegel Lab in the Genome Center of the University of California, Davis.
Researchers at UC Davis’ Siegel Lab have cloned a native wheat enzyme in several varieties of wheat, Fabbri said. Researchers next will conduct a series of lab experiments, or “enzyme kinetics,” to validate the enzyme’s activity and determine its sensitivity to heat.
The objective is to find a small handful of mutations that could be injected into that enzyme to give it heat stability and then validate it through in vitro studies, Fabbri added.

Brad Fabbri, TechAccel
“Essentially, the main goal is to come up with a ‘recipe’ that you could then go in and use something like a CRISPR-Cas or some other gene editing technique to make a non-GMO (genetically modified organism) wheat that actually has that recipe put into its genome,” Fabbri said.
If successful, the developed enzyme would be able to withstand temperatures up to 10 degrees Celsius above the ideal range, according to a press release.
“We are excited to bring the cutting-edge technologies of computational protein design and synthetic biology to tackle this important problem,” said Justin Siegel, UC-Davis assistant professor of chemistry, biochemistry and molecular medicine, in a press release. “The unique combination of technologies and discoveries brought together in this endeavor by TechAccel and UC Davis has the potential to build wheat varietals that we need in a world with an ever-changing climate.”
The Siegel Lab’s advanced enzyme design and engineering capabilities make it the “perfect partner for this important research,” Fabbri said. “If we are successful in demonstrating the enzyme’s effectiveness, the next step will be to employ gene editing to produce a non-GMO wheat with significantly improved yield.”
Harold Trick, a bioscience professor at Kansas State University, hypothesized one of the molecular reasons behind a decreasing wheat yield, which turned out to be an enzyme that loses activity when the temperature even slightly increases, Fabbri said.

The effect of increasing temperature on wheat seed size. Photo courtesy of Harold Trick, Kansas State University
“He had demonstrated that you could put in a transgenic, a heat stable version, of this enzyme and showed that it overcame the yield loss,” Fabbri said of Trick’s work, which led to the project between Fabbri and UC Davis.
TechAccel is leveraging innovation at a couple of major land grant universities such as Kansas State University — where the wheat knowledge and expertise lies — and at UC Davis, where the firm can access world-class protein engineering, Fabbri said.
The firm builds relationships with universities, both to access capabilities like protein engineering, and to look for innovations within the universities that the firm can then fund and try to move toward commercialization, he added.
“This wheat project is an example of that,” Fabbri said.
The final product won’t be on shelves overnight; Fabbri hopes the first bag of seed would be available for purchase in six to eight years, he said. In fact, it may take three to five years to ultimately get the product in the hands of a wheat seed company.
“It’ll take us a handful of years after that, given that we’re talking about a plant and that you ultimately need to grow it and produce seed and then produce even more,” Fabbri said. “It takes a little bit of time just to even do the manufacturing because you’re somewhat at the mercy of the seasons.
“It’s not [like] something else that you manufacture, that you can just put things in the tank and hope for the best. Ultimately, you need to put things into the field and wait for it to grow and harvest.”
There is also a “difficult and long path” to go through regulations, he added.
“There’s some public debate of whether or not they would want a transgenic wheat,” he said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
5 glimpses into Uber VP Brian McClendon’s crystal ball
Brian McClendon — vice president of maps and business platform at Uber — may reside in Silicon Valley, but his roots are here in the prairie. Originally from Lawrence, Kan., McClendon graduated from the University of Kansas with a degree in electrical engineering and now serves on several advisory boards for his alma mater. Sporting…
EyeVerify sells to Alibaba affiliate for more than $100M
In what represents one of the metro’s most notable exits in the last decade, Kansas City-based startup EyeVerify announced Tuesday that it has been acquired. Ant Financial — the payments affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding — purchased EyeVerify for more than $100 million, according to an unnamed local source familiar with the deal. Ant Financial…
Google Express offering delivery services in Kansas City
As part of a massive Midwestern expansion, Google Express is offering its services in Kansas City. Google announced Tuesday that it’s now offering delivery services to more than 40 million new Midwest customers after its debut in 2013. Google Express — an online marketplace that connects shoppers with retailers — provides delivery services of…
[Update] KCK startup to pitch at TechCrunch Startup Battlefield Monday
A graduate of the Sprint Mobile Accelerator is gearing up for a pitch on what’s arguably the biggest stage in the startup tech world. Based in Kansas City, Kan., Rex Animal Health is participating Monday evening in TechCrunch’s Disrupt San Francisco 2016 Startup Battlefield competition for a chance at winning $50,000 and the Disrupt Cup.…
