One of the world’s largest multinational biotechnology and pharmaceutical corporations is providing support to an Indiana-based company to help farmers and growers combat crop loss due to fungal infections.
Mohammad Noshi, chief scientific officer and co-founder of Akanocure Pharmaceuticals Inc., leads one of 18 international projects to receive support from Bayer. Noshi is a recipient of the Grants4Ag Award, an annual initiative from Bayer to provide expertise and funding to researchers developing novel agricultural solutions. This year’s awards focused on transformative research and development and breakthrough technologies for the next generation of crop-protection solutions.
Akanocure Pharmaceuticals CEO and co-founder Sherine Abdelmawla and Mohammad Noshi, the company’s chief scientific officer and co-founder, are developing antifungal agents with unique properties and mechanisms of action for crop protection. Noshi has received the Grants4Ag Award from Bayer to lead one of 18 international projects to develop novel agricultural solutions. (Purdue Research Foundation photo/Steve Martin)
Noshi also received Bayer’s 2023 Testing4Ag Award.
Akanocure is located at Purdue Research Park of West Lafayette and licenses Purdue University intellectual property through the Purdue Innovates Office of Technology Commercialization. Akanocure also developed its own intellectual property that is directly related to the awards. The company has also received funding from Purdue Innovates. Noshi and Akanocure CEO and co-founder Sherine Abdelmawla are both Purdue alumni.
The impact of fungal infections
Noshi said fungal infections are so pervasive that the amount of loss in major crops due to fungal infections is enough to feed nearly 9% of the global population — and it could get worse.
Mohammad Noshi, Akanocure Pharmaceuticals co-founder and chief scientific officer, analyzes a new antifungal compound for crops. (Purdue Research Foundation photo/Steve Martin)
″Crop loss due to fungal infection will continue to rise and become more complicated,″ Noshi said. ″Current fungal pathogens will mutate and develop a higher resistance to current antifungal agents. A new generation of antifungal candidates to address these global crop problems must be developed.″
Akanocure is developing antifungal agents with unique properties and mechanisms of action for crop protection. Noshi said the company’s technology addresses challenges often faced in development: the design, synthesis and larger-scale production of complex structures that are safe and effective.
″The high synthetic flexibility of our platform technology solves the manufacturing problem and ensures the continuous evolution of better candidates,″ Noshi said. ″We can fine-tune the physical and chemical properties of the compounds to achieve the highest degree of efficacy.″
Noshi said the compounds are designed to be safe for the environment and for human consumption.
″They are meant to target a broad spectrum of different species of fungi that affect different varieties of crops,″ Noshi said.
Bayer’s impact
Noshi said Bayer’s support includes funding and access to resources that include mentoring and biological testing. Akanocure will leverage the support into the research and development of the novel antifungal compounds.
Noshi and his colleagues are excited to receive the award from one of the world’s leaders in agriculture-related research and innovation.
″Senior Bayer representatives told us that the Grants4Ag application process was extremely competitive. More than 90 proposals were received and only 18 received support. We feel very excited and honored to be one of these few recipients,″ Noshi said. ″The project itself is very exciting for Akanocure, and the opportunity to work with Bayer on our research is a humbling achievement.″
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