Programmable Plants

Plants have paved the way for human existence and hold the key to solving some of our most pressing challenges, from food insecurity to environmental degradation. Programmable plants could secure our future on Earth, providing not just food, but a sustainable and thriving biosphere for future generations.

Opportunity seeds


Outside the scope of programmes, with budgets of up to £500k, opportunity seeds support ambitious research aligned to our opportunity spaces.

From landmine-clearing plants to leveraging stochasticity in synthetic biology, we’re funding 14 opportunity seeds in the Programmable Plants opportunity space.

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Fast-Track Crop Improvement: Breaking Free from Tissue Culture

Sofia Kourmpetli, Cranfield University

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Green PROTACs – Enabling Small Molecule (Re)programming and Manipulation of Plant Biology

Piers Hemsley, University of Dundee

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A Universal Endosymbiont-Mediated Transient Gene Expression Platform for Plants

Ari Sadanandom, Durham University + Adriana Botes, Azotic Technologies

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PlantPlug: Bioengineering Parasitic Plants into Programmable Modules

Pallavi Singh, University of Essex

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CRY for Crop Development and Remote Control

Daniel Kattnig, University of Exeter

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Idioblast Switch

Nicholas Holton, Hypocotyl Ltd

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Programmable Plant Immunity by Design

Tolga Bozkurt, Imperial College London

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Cross-Kingdom Immunity: Upgrading and Rewiring Plant Defenses

Philip Carella, John Innes Centre

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FERN (Flora Electrophysiological Recording Network)

Samuel Jellard, Mycovolt Technologies

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Rooting Out Danger

Richard Webster, Liverpool John Moores University

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Smart Engineered Bacterial Conduits for Enhanced Crop Performance

Ciarán Kelly, Northumbria University + Emma Riley, Northumbria University

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An Artificial Hybridisation System Enabled by Direct Transformation of Plant Mitochondria

Junwei Ji + Junliang Song, Cytotrait

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Robust Plant Engineering Through Stochastic Synthetic Biology

James Locke + Chris Micklem, University of Cambridge

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Direct Seed Transformation for Rapid Crop Improvement Through Rational Engineering of Agrobacterium

George Bassel, University of Warwick

A picture of Angie Burnett smiling against a blue curtain background.

“Plants are the foundation of human life on Earth and are critical for securing our future. Recent advances in genetic technologies and synthetic biology can be unified to push the limits of what’s possible in plant science, to develop resilient crops and ecosystems for tomorrow’s world.”

Angie Burnett

Programme Director