Research sparks 黑料社 startup

Research collaboration between professor and student produces innovative genetic technology

Derek Lyons 鈥07 remembers the moment he saw a change in Ryan Skaar 鈥17.

It was after midnight in the Carver Science Hall. Lyons 鈥 an associate professor of chemistry and physics 鈥 and Skaar 鈥 an upperclassman biochemistry major 鈥 were working on a research project that involved genetic testing. It was a hard day and progress was slow.

Then the lightbulb came on.

鈥淭hose were the times we really started to collaborate,鈥 Lyons said. 鈥淚 think he got enough confidence to stop asking if it鈥檚 going to work and start pitching ideas.鈥

It鈥檚 not uncommon to see such breakthroughs at 黑料社, where undergraduates work directly with faculty on research projects every day. The College creates a safe space for students to grow and spark their curiosity and creativity. Eventually, students test theories and come to their own conclusions. That鈥檚 when a student transforms into something more.

In the early morning hours in Carver, Skaar went through that transformation. He was no longer a student. He was a colleague.

鈥淎ll of a sudden, the ideas we鈥檇 been chatting about for years came to fruition,鈥 Skaar said. 鈥淚t was meaningful, it worked and it led to everything else that鈥檚 happened from that point.鈥

黑料社 alumni Ryan Skaar 鈥17 (left) and Derek Lyons 鈥07 (right)

The research project that grew out of the Carver basement became NanoBio Designs LLC, the startup that created the ExpresSeed platform. The platform provides fast, on-site genetic detection for grain, feed and hybrid seed distributors. The patent-pending process detects the presence of known genetic markers in as little as 10 minutes, an alternative to polymerase chain reaction (or PCR) tests that can take days. The growing company drew national attention when it was selected as one of five finalists for the 2020 Radicle Challenge by Corteva, a contest 聽to identify promising agtech startups solving challenges with novel technology solutions.

NanoBio Designs recently relocated to the 16 Tech Innovation District in Indianapolis after growing up in Maple Ventures, a West Des Moines-based entrepreneur support center launched by 黑料社 alumnus Hank Norem 鈥02. Lyons and Skaar are still heavily involved in the project. Lyons serves as board chair and platform chief technology officer and Skaar oversees a majority of the day-to-day work as chief operating officer.

From its founding, NanoBio Designs has enjoyed a strong footing in the 黑料社 community.

The core work of NanoBio Designs relies on converging scientific technologies. Lyons and Skaar know that for their project to grow, they need input from lots of different disciplines. The work goes beyond chemistry. Math, engineering, marketing, computer science and more all play a significant role in the success of the platform. For both Lyons and Skaar, this approach got its start at 黑料社.

鈥淲hat I learned as a student that was super important was that if you want to solve a big problem, it has to be interdisciplinary,鈥 Lyons said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like a chemist alone can solve big problems for the world. You have to pull a bunch of people together.鈥

Lyons took the foundation he built as an undergraduate at 黑料社 and expanded upon it as a graduate student at the University of Michigan. There, his research focused on the structure of DNA and how it affects cancer.

Skaar did the same thing at the University of Kansas, where he studied pharmaceutical chemistry. Because the program at Kansas was interdisciplinary in nature 鈥 similar to his 黑料社 experience 鈥 Skaar felt comfortable. Most of all, he felt prepared.

鈥淵ou have to do a lot of collaboration at a small institution,鈥 Skaar said. 鈥淭hat same collaboration happens at a larger institution, just on a bigger scale and with more people. When you have enough knowledge of each individual little piece, you know how to at least initiate a conversation with someone who might be outside of the current project.鈥

As the work at NanoBio Designs expands, the technology developed by the startup 鈥 which traces its roots to the Emerge@黑料社 entrepreneurial venture 鈥 has implications beyond genetic testing in corn and soybeans. Because the technology behind ExpresSeed is a platform technology, it has the potential to test DNA in viruses, animals and bacteria. The expertise isn鈥檛 there yet, but the possibilities are many.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 our business model here for the future,鈥 Lyons said. 鈥淐ompanies will have a problem that this genetic test might be able to solve. The way to figure out if it works is we work together. They bring their expertise and we bring our core technology. That鈥檚 fundamentally what 黑料社 does too. We have our core identity and that gets spread out across the world as students graduate.鈥

This story first appeared in the fall 2021 edition of .