New Plant Breeding Techniques (NPBT) in molecular farming: Multipurpose crops for industrial bioproducts

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Domaine de recherche :
Bioéconomie
Type de financement :
H2020
Type d'instrument :
Recherche & Innovation Action
Budget indicatif :
between EUR 5 and 7 million
Budget total :
48 M€ pour trois appels BIOTEC
Code de l'appel : BIOTEC-07-2017
En savoir plus
À noter :
TRL visé: 
3-5

Molecular farming involves the production of pharmaceutical and industrial compounds in plants through advanced technologies and it offers a competitive platform for the manufacturing of high-end products. Examples are plant-derived vaccines and the production of other commercially valuable proteins or small molecules. Indeed, plants are highly amenable to the production of a wide range of proteins, some of which are specific. In addition, the scalability allowed by plants exceeds that of other production systems. Molecular farming represents a development opportunity for a set of new high-value crops, for the health, chemical and agricultural industries and their related technology sectors. However, the expansion of molecular farming has been dawdling, due to its reliance on standard genetic modification and the hurdles it poses for commercialisation.

In the past ten years, complementary and more sophisticated new plant breeding techniques (NPBT) have been developed to produce new plants with the desired traits circumventing the main drawbacks of standard genetic modification (i.e. no foreign DNA is contained in the resulting end product). The use of NPBT for molecular farming could provide opportunities for new crops for the production of bioproducts, while maintaining the position of leadership of the European plant breeding sector in research and innovation.

Scope:

Proposals should use the technologies comprised in the NPBT set[[SANCO http://ec.europa.eu/food/plant/gmo/new_breeding_techniques/index_en.htm and JRC http://ftp.jrc.es/EURdoc/JRC63971.pdf]] , in particular those that avoid final genetic modification products, with plants amenable to be used as green factories in order to yield industrial high-value products. Proposals should address at least one of the following areas:

  • Minor, underutilized and non-food crops suitable for the extraction of bioactive compounds.
  • Crops that grow more efficiently and have higher yields of the target bioproduct, while being more tolerant to adverse environmental conditions.
  • Improved plant-based low-cost platforms for commercial production of bioproducts.

Proposals should address elements of Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH), contributing to a better understanding of plant breeding and related biotechnologies by the general public.

Insofar as possible, proposals will involve SMEs and engage in international cooperation.

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