May 1, 2026

DNS Africa Resource Center

..sharing knowledge.

CRISPR-edited crops break new ground in Africa – Nature.com

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.
Advertisement
You can also search for this author in PubMed  Google Scholar
A field of sorghum in Botswana. Gene editing has created sorghum plants that are resistant to a destructive parasite called witchweed. Credit: MarcPo/Getty

San Diego, California
Molecular biologist Steven Runo once thought that his team would make history as the first to plant gene-edited seeds in African soil. The competition turned out to be stiffer than he’d anticipated.
A research group working on maize “beat us by two or three months”, says Runo, who works at Kenyatta University in Nairobi and whose gene-editing project focuses on sorghum. “But that’s good — African countries will see that this is actually possible.”
The friendly rivalry is a sign of progress. Researchers have long hoped that the relative ease and low cost of CRISPR gene-editing systems would make it possible for scientists in low- and middle-income countries to produce crops with traits tailored to the needs of local farmers — rather than relying on seeds developed in foreign countries. Now scientists are overseeing at least a dozen efforts to develop such gene-edited crops.
Among those projects is Runo’s effort to engineer sorghum to be resistant to Striga hermonthica, a troublesome species of a parasitic plant known as witchweed. Field trials of the new variety are scheduled for later this year, Runo said at the Plant and Animal Genome Conference in San Diego, California, on 16 January.
“It’s not as easy as people make it out to be to do gene editing, but it is pretty accessible,” says Kevin Pixley, a research director at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Texcoco, Mexico. “Runo is a perfect example of that.”
Sorghum is a hardy crop that is used widely in Africa for food, building materials and feedstock. But more than 60% of African farmland is contaminated with species of Striga, a parasitic plant that attaches itself to sorghum roots and siphons away nutrients and water. A witchweed infestation can wipe out an entire crop.
Some wild varieties of sorghum are resistant to Striga because they carry mutations that alter the crop’s production of compounds called strigolactones, which promote germination of Striga seeds. Runo and his collaborators have used CRISPR–Cas9 to mimic these mutations.
Witchweed, which infests a large proportion of farmland in Africa, can devastate a crop.Credit: weisschr/Getty
Under Kenya’s 2022 regulations governing gene-edited crops, such plants are treated like conventionally bred crops because they do not contain DNA from another species. This means that these gene-edited plants can bypass some of the heavy testing and requirements imposed on genetically modified crops that contain foreign DNA. Nigeria and Malawi have similar policies, and other African countries, including Ethiopia and Uganda, are expected to follow suit, Runo says.
Last year, Kenyan authorities gave Runo and his collaborators permission to grow the gene-edited seeds under those regulations, and he plans to launch field studies later this year. It is a significant step, Runo said at the conference, because Striga is not a problem in wealthier regions — meaning that large, multinational corporations have little incentive to develop solutions for it.
Other gene-editing projects are underway to improve African agricultural products. Pixley and his collaborators, including researchers at the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization in Nairobi, have developed ways to edit maize (corn) to make it resistant to maize lethal necrosis disease. They are also editing pearl millet to make its flour less prone to becoming rancid soon after milling, and groundnuts to make them more resistant to infection by the fungus that produces cancer-causing aflatoxins.

How Dolly the sheep’s legacy lives on: CRISPR cattle and cloned camels
African livestock are also being edited. At the Plant and Animal Genome Conference, Dan Carlson, chief scientific officer at Recombinetics in Eagan, Minnesota, described a project in which African breeds of cattle are being edited improve their milk yields and tolerance to heat and disease.
Although gene editing is relatively cheap to perform in the laboratory, there are still significant hurdles to bringing edited crops to the farm, says Klara Fischer, who studies rural development at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala.
“Sometimes the discourse around this technology is overly enthusiastic,” she says. And because the market is unlikely to provide for poor small-scale farmers with limited purchasing power, government involvement would probably still be needed for the gene-edited products to benefit them.
Runo has relied on funding from the US Agency for International Development and has collaborated with Corteva Agriscience, an agricultural company in Indianapolis, Indiana. Pixley and his team have received funds from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in Seattle, Washington, and have also gotten technical assistance from Corteva.

How CRISPR could yield the next blockbuster crop
Runo is mindful that this support might not always be available. He and his team are working on cutting the cost of lab supplies and equipment and finding alternative funding sources.
Also unknown, says Pixley, is how intellectual-property battles over CRISPR gene editing will ultimately affect efforts in Africa, and whether foreign markets — particularly in Europe — will be open to African-grown gene-edited crops.
But as for local acceptance of the crops, Runo says the farmers he has spoken to feel more comfortable with crops developed by a local researcher than with seeds developed abroad. “This is not a multinational company. The people using the technology are people you have grown up with,” he says. “The narrative is very different.”
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-00176-8
Reprints and permissions
Africa’s forgotten crops could offset growing food insecurity
I train farmers to use plant science in the fight against climate change
Averting hunger in sub-Saharan Africa requires data and synthesis
Genetic modification can improve crop yields — but stop overselling it
China’s approval of gene-edited crops energizes researchers
CRISPR plants now subject to tough GM laws in European Union
Indigenous knowledge is key to sustainable food systems
EU proposal on CRISPR-edited crops is welcome — but not enough
A crop that feeds billions freed from blight by CRISPR
How African scientists are improving cassava to help feed the world
All arabica coffee is genetically similar: how can beans taste so different?
News
Spatial IMA1 regulation restricts root iron acquisition on MAMP perception
Article
How plants iron out the competing interests of growth and defence
News & Views
All arabica coffee is genetically similar: how can beans taste so different?
News
How plants iron out the competing interests of growth and defence
News & Views
How CRISPR could yield the next blockbuster crop
News Feature
Applicants with expertise in aging and neurodegeneration and related areas are particularly encouraged to apply.
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Westlake Laboratory of Life Sciences and Biomedicine (WLLSB)
We are seeking outstanding scientists to lead vigorous independent research programs focusing on all aspects of chemical biology including…
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
School of Life Sciences, Westlake University
We seek exceptional candidates to lead vigorous independent research programs working in any area of neurobiology.
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
School of Life Sciences, Westlake University
Non-tenure Track, Open Rank, Full-Time Teaching Faculty Positions
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Westlake University
Houston, Texas (US)
Baylor College of Medicine (BCM)
You have full access to this article via your institution.

Africa’s forgotten crops could offset growing food insecurity
I train farmers to use plant science in the fight against climate change
Averting hunger in sub-Saharan Africa requires data and synthesis
Genetic modification can improve crop yields — but stop overselling it
China’s approval of gene-edited crops energizes researchers
CRISPR plants now subject to tough GM laws in European Union
Indigenous knowledge is key to sustainable food systems
EU proposal on CRISPR-edited crops is welcome — but not enough
A crop that feeds billions freed from blight by CRISPR
How African scientists are improving cassava to help feed the world
An essential round-up of science news, opinion and analysis, delivered to your inbox every weekday.
Sign up for the Nature Briefing newsletter — what matters in science, free to your inbox daily.
Nature (Nature) ISSN 1476-4687 (online) ISSN 0028-0836 (print)
© 2024 Springer Nature Limited

source

About The Author