Biopesticide AgTech building toward RNAissance with TechAccel cultivation
January 29, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
KC-based TechAccel endeavors to guide startups through “the valley of death” stage that emerges after ideation, but before traction, said Brad Fabbri, noting the firm’s new venture, RNAissance Ag, is expected to disrupt the ag tech industry with environmentally-safe biopesticides.
“We try to find products and help develop them to make [farmers’] lives easier and make their businesses more profitable,” said Fabbri, chief science officer at the venture and tech development firm that focuses on plant and animal related products.
Click here to learn more about TechAccel.
TechAccel — founded in 2014 based on an “equity-plus” model for investment — teams up with universities and researchers to incubate the next ag tech invention and cultivate the resulting startups from the ground up, Fabbri said, in addition to the firm’s more traditional investments.
“We have a really good chance of putting out a fantastic product that the farmers are really going to love [with RNAissance Ag],” he added. “And it’s all coming out of Kansas City and St. Louis area, so it’s not coming from the coast — just from a regional perspective, it’s really exciting.”
“We’re good at agriculture [in the Midwest,] among other things,” Fabbri laughed.
Click here to read more about TechAccel’s expansion into St. Louis.

Brad Fabbri, TechAccel
To build RNAissance, the firm collaborated with Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis to develop the RNAi-based tech that makes the still-in-the-works biopesticide products that is expected to disturb or push away pests, as well as harmless insects, to minimize damage to the existing biome, and to those who could possibly ingest the chemical, Fabbri said.
RNA exists in all living beings and is consumed by humans on a daily basis, he added, noting the utilization of the molecule in insecticides is not a new concept, though the design RNAissance puts forth is expected to be more effective than other iterations.
Click here to learn more about RNAissance Ag.
“[RNAi-based products] are similar to those new cancer treatments that are very specific and just attack the cancer cells … [as opposed to] the nasty chemotherapy that can make all your hair fall out and get you sicker,” Fabbri said. “I think it’s the way that a lot of agriculture [products] are going to go.”
“I don’t want to say that if [RNAi products] are successful, then everybody’s just going to use RNAi-based insecticides,” he added. “If it is successful, what it’s going to be is another tool.”
TechAccel’s recent investment in biotech firm GreenLight Biosciences, based in Medford, Massachusetts, for an amount undisclosed — GreenLight announced a $50 million series round earlier in 2019 — made an important contribution to the use of RNAi for the KC company, said Fabbri.
“Up to just a few years ago, RNA at the cheapest was maybe one to $10,000 per gram, which is too expensive to spray on a field, but GreenLight got it below a dollar a gram which actually makes it possible to actually use RNA as an ag chemical,” he said. “So that was really important that we’re doing.”
TechAccel’s investment model is catered to be flexible to the needs of the company, whether they’re supplementing a round or incubating up a pre-company idea, he added, noting patient investors eliminate the mad rush for a quick exit.
“We’re certainly hopeful that it’s not too long [before] we will have some [companies] that exit — but we are still pretty young,” said Fabbri. “We try to balance our portfolio with firms that might have a quicker exit versus things that may take longer to develop. Our investors are very astute and they know that a lot of the things that they’re investing in takes some time to nurture.”
Click here to read more about TechAccel’s collaboration with UC Davis lab to develop wheat expected to combat climate change.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How Urban TEC used eye-opening VR tech to bring teen mental health into the real world
Students at two Kansas City, Kansas, high schools are tackling teen mental health issues with the help of virtual reality, shared youth and tech advocate Ina P. Montgomery. From February through April, 28 students from Wyandotte and JC Harmon high schools learned Unity programming software, identified and researched a health concern for youth ages 13…
‘Mr. K’ finalists tease what it’s like to work for the next Small Business of the Year
Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. Finalists for the KC Chamber’s Small Business of the Year award highlighted their companies’ commitments to strong workplace culture, DEI initiatives, and community relations during a panel…
KCMO forms small biz task force for entrepreneurs; underinvested businesses a key focus
Editor’s note: KC BizCare, the small business office of Kansas City, Missouri, is a partner of Startland News. A new task force committed to giving space for Kansas City small business owners to share their voices — on issues ranging from major events like the NFL Draft to everyday concerns on permits and zoning —…
Rescue florists give new life to leftover flowers; nonprofit just needs 6-inch stems and someone to surprise
Impact is growing again for an initiative that sends recycled floral arrangements — flowers otherwise headed for the trash after events — to homebound Kansas City seniors. Volunteer-run Unexpected Blooms recently celebrated its sixth birthday, after being forced to take a pause when the pandemic stalled many large gatherings from which they sourced flowers, shared…

