Texas A&M AgriLife Research quarterly agency update • December 2022
Director's message
Howdy,

The 2022 calendar year is coming to an end, marking my first full year of service as director of Texas A&M AgriLife Research. I want to thank you all for a highly rewarding and productive year for our agency.

2022 saw a record $160 million in external grants and contracts, a team of faculty members receiving the largest single award in AgriLife Research history, $65 million, and an NSF ranking of AgriLife Research as the No. 1 agricultural research agency in the U.S. These accomplishments could not have been achieved without the dedication of our faculty, staff and students who contribute to our enterprise. Thanks for all you do!

Since our last newsletter, Dr. Henry Fadamiro, associate director and chief scientific officer, has taken a new role as associate vice president for strategic initiatives with Texas A&M University. Henry was an outstanding resource for AgriLife Research and will be missed. He initiated multiple new initiatives, which we plan to advance in 2023. These plans include continued enhancement of our faculty programs for success and engagement.

I am grateful that Dr. Sandy Pierson has agreed to serve as interim associate director while we initiate a search for a permanent replacement. Sandy brings years of administrative experience and is already making a difference. Please keep an eye out for the position description, and consider applying if you feel qualified.

Recent successes: Advancing our research enterprise

This past November, the Board of Regents established the Texas A&M Institute for Equine Sciences. It aims to be the best, most collaborative equine program in the world — improving the industry and its participants and enhancing horse care and welfare. The institute will lead an effort to enhance research infrastructure and deliver the best education for students and equine industry professionals. A search for a director has been initiated, and we hope to have someone in place by mid-2023.

In October, Texas A&M AgriLife opened the Precision Phenotyping Greenhouse. More about the greenhouse is included below. I appreciate the collaborative efforts of multiple faculty, staff and administrators who provided support and effort to get the facility built and operational. The facility was partially funded by a Chancellor’s Research Initiative grant, and we hope it will bring long-lasting impacts to the plant sciences while enhancing our competitiveness for grants.

In addition, the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics had the grand opening of the Cryo-EM Research Center. The center represents a continuation of the department’s long history of contribution to structural biology. This collaborative effort between Texas A&M University and AgriLife Research brings state-of-the-art technologies in atomic-resolution microscopy to our campus.

Looking ahead: AgriLife Research in 2023

In the coming year, we hope to initiate additional priorities that will have long-lasting positive impacts on our research enterprise. We fully expect the School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences to be integrated into our research enterprise. This should generate enhanced collaborations in College Station and across the state. We also anticipate new programs that help connect our more than 600 faculty across Texas. Therefore, I encourage you all to attend Texas A&M AgriLife Connect. This conference will provide valuable opportunities to interact with members of Texas A&M AgriLife from all our agencies.
I wish you all an enjoyable break with friends and family, and I anticipate that 2023 will be another outstanding year for AgriLife Research.

Gig 'em!
G. Cliff Lamb
Director, Texas A&M AgriLife Research 
Agency updates
Pierson named AgriLife Research interim associate director

Fadamiro joins Texas A&M University Division of Research
Leland “Sandy” Pierson, Ph.D., professor in the Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, will serve as interim associate director and chief scientific officer for Texas A&M AgriLife Research.
Rajan selected to EPA agricultural environmental issues committee

Farm, Ranch and Rural Communities Federal Advisory Committee evaluates policies, programs at intersection of agriculture, climate change
Texas A&M AgriLife’s Nithya Rajan, Ph.D., was on the list when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, announced the appointment of 20 members to the Farm, Ranch, and Rural Communities Federal Advisory Committee, FRRCC.
Remembering John Edward Matocha

Matocha was professor emeritus of soil chemistry, faculty in Overton, Corpus Christi
John Edward Matocha, 83, of Beeville, passed away Nov. 18. He was professor emeritus in soil chemistry and plant nutrition, and he was a valued faculty member at Texas A&M AgriLife Research & Extension Centers in Overton and Corpus Christi.
Strategic planning note
As noted in our September newsletter, departments and centers will be working on updating or generating new research strategic plans. All units are encouraged to connect new plans to the new five-year AgriLife Research strategic plan and its four strategic priorities:

  1. Discover new innovations, technologies and science-based solutions to enhance agricultural and ecological systems and the life sciences.
  2. Provide the translational research necessary to develop and produce high-quality, safe and sustainable food and fiber systems with local, national and global impacts. 
  3. Enhance the efficiency, profitability and resiliency of agriculture, natural resources and food systems in the state of Texas and the world.
  4. Discover, disseminate and facilitate the adoption of scientific evidence at the intersection of nutrition, human health and agriculture.
Research news
Texas A&M AgriLife debuts automated precision phenotyping greenhouse

‘Future of agricultural research’ features robotics, sensor technology
Featuring state-of-the-art robotics, remote sensing and data-capturing capabilities, Texas A&M AgriLife Research has launched “the future of agricultural research” with its multi-million dollar Automated Precision Phenotyping Greenhouse on the Texas A&M University campus in Bryan-College Station.
Texas A&M AgriLife to lead historic investment in Texas’ efforts to become ‘climate-smart’

Texas A&M AgriLife Research receives largest competitive grant in its history
The Texas A&M University System has received a $1.19 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, NIH, for a multidisciplinary collaboration to study the intricate connections between genomics, nutrition and health. Understanding these connections will help in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other diseases.
Board of Regents establishes Texas A&M Institute for Equine Sciences

Institute merges equine research, academics, facilities to advance industry, leadership, horse well-being
The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents has approved the establishment of the Texas A&M Institute for Equine Sciences. The new institute will bring together world-class science, academic expertise and facilities to advance its equine mission. Major goals include strengthening equine collaborations among public and private sectors and academia.
Texas A&M AgriLife designs system to create bioplastics

Method could reduce nondegradable plastics and greenhouse gas emissions
A team of Texas A&M AgriLife Research scientists has developed a system that uses carbon dioxide, CO2, to produce biodegradable plastics, or bioplastics, that could replace the nondegradable plastics used today. The research addresses two challenges: the accumulation of nondegradable plastics and the remediation of greenhouse gas emissions.
Atomic-resolution microscopy facility opens at Texas A&M

Instrumentation will greatly improve molecule imaging
A state-of-the-art resource for cryogenic-electron microscopy, cryo-EM, is now set up at the Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics and open to all academic and industry users.
$1.19 million grant will leverage single-cell sequencing technology

National Institutes of Health-funded project will help with cancer diagnosis, treatment, prevention 
The Texas A&M University System has received a $1.19 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, NIH, for a multidisciplinary collaboration to study the intricate connections between genomics, nutrition and health. Understanding these connections will help in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other diseases.
Are your research results ready for commercialization?

The Intellectual Property and Commercialization, IPaC, office is the technology transfer office for Texas A&M AgriLife. Our office helps secure the value of the intellectual property, IP, created by Texas A&M AgriLife researchers. We help researchers and The Texas A&M University System connect intellectual property to companies via licensing agreements — bringing Texas A&M AgriLife’s research results to the benefit of the public. 
In the media
Southern Living - Brisket Just Might Be Good For You

Rejoice, barbecue lovers: brisket is good for you. A team of clever researchers at Texas A&M set out to prove that barbecue is not just a good taste, but good for you, too. They found that beef brisket contains high levels of oleic acid.
Futurity - Team uses carbon dioxide to make green bioplastics

A new system that uses carbon dioxide to produce biodegradable plastics, or bioplastics, could replace the nondegradable plastics used today, researchers say.
News Medical, Life Sciences - Researchers find new way to deliver a protein quickly, effectively and briefly to the brain

Many diseases have at their origin a protein that does not function properly. Now, a multidisciplinary research team with Texas A&M AgriLife and Texas A&M University has found a way to deliver a protein quickly, effectively and briefly to the brain, with therapeutic and scientific implications.
Science Daily - Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease progression: New study shows role of adenosine kinase in fat deposition, liver inflammation

A study led by Texas A&M AgriLife Research provides compelling evidence of the important role of hepatocyte adenosine kinase in the progression of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, NAFLD.
Research funding opportunities and project support

The Texas A&M AgriLife Office of Corporate Engagement and Research Support, CERS, assists research faculty in obtaining federal and private funding for comprehensive multidisciplinary research projects. CERS aims to alleviate administrative burdens associated with larger projects, allowing faculty more focus on research activities. Read more about CERS and sign up for the office’s Weekly Funding Opportunity Newsletter online.
Upcoming this quarter
Please look out for news about these AgriLife Research items during the upcoming quarter:
  • Texas A&M AgriLife Research leadership continues to visit regional centers and on-campus departments; look out for messaging from center leadership and department heads.
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