Company working at Delaware Innovation Space receives funding from Breakout Labs

306
Advertisement

Napigen, a Delaware company working at the Delaware Innovation Space, Wilmington, has been selected to receive funding from Breakout Labs. 

Breakout Labs is a fund within the Thiel Foundation that supports early-stage companies as they move radical scientific discoveries out of the lab and into the market.

Napigen  is working to reinvent gene editing. Napigen’s proprietary technology opens up new business opportunities in healthcare, industrial biotechnology and agriculture.

The company’s first products will be in agriculture.

Hybridization has been an important tool for increasing yield in crops such as corn, but has been impeded in other crops, such as wheat, which is the most highly planted and consumed human staple.

Advertisement

Napigen’s hybridization technology allows the production of non-GMO hybrid seeds in crop plants that are currently mostly non-hybrid. Breakout Labs is funding proof of concept experiments in wheat, which will be critical to developing industry partnerships.

The hybrid vigor of Napigen products is expected to provide transformative increases in crop yields, to address the food security needs of our society in view of the dramatic population increase expected this century.

Napigen is led by Dr. Hajime Sakai, who has 18 years experience in agricultural R&D at DuPont Pioneer and a Ph.D in Yeast Mitochondrial Genetics.

Napigen’s co-founders include Berkeley professor and entrepreneur, Dr. Jay Keasling along with agriculture investor, Dr. Roger Wyse and agriculture industry veteran, Dr. Ganesh Kishore. The company is currently located at the Delaware Innovation Space in Wilmington, DE.

To learn more about the company, please visit www.napigen.com.

Advertisement
Advertisement