Biotalys partners with universities on biocontrol research
Biotalys has entered into academic collaborations with researchers in plant pathology in the U.S. and United Kingdom (UK).
Biotalys is developing a series of biocontrols to support growers in protecting their crops from pests and diseases. The company’s research and development program BioFun-4 was initiated last year to develop a biofungicide against Phytophthora infestans, an oomycete (water mold) that causes late blight/potato blight, a serious disease that particularly affects fruit and vegetable crops and potatoes.
Biotalys has entered into a research collaboration agreement with the University of Aberdeen (UK), under which Biotalys will sponsor a three-year project in the Oomycete Laboratory of Pieter van West, chair in mycology, a professor in the field of plant and animal pathogenic oomycetes. This project will deepen the expertise in oomycetes at the molecular level and fits well with Biotalys’ highly targeted strategy of applying a discovery method based on defined molecular targets, as core of its Agrobody 2.0 technology platform.
The second agreement related to BioFun-7 is with the University of California-Davis and the lab of Ioannis Stergiopoulos in the department of Plant Pathology. Stergiopoulos dedicates his research to the understanding of fungal plant pathogens and to translating this knowledge into effective intervention strategies for disease control. In this collaboration, the lab will perform a functional analysis of antifungal targets in select plant pathogens, pertinent to the BioFun-7 program.
“With these collaborations we have announced today, we continue to build on the strong scientific foundation of our programs and technology,” Carlo Boutton, chief scientific officer at Biotalys, said in a news release. “I am a firm believer of the synergies that can be created between the expertise and excellent research in academia and industry, and the announced new collaborations are examples of that vision.
Biotalys already has academic partnerships with the University of Ghent and the Flemish Institute of Biotech VIB. In addition, the company previously received a grant from the Flemish Agency for Innovation and Entrepreneurship for a project to conduct research around novel protein-based fungicides.
The company has a Scientific Advisory Committee of leading experts, formed in late 2022 to support the company’s continued growth, accelerate product pipeline efforts and deepen scientific partnership initiatives.