Research Focus
Research Focus:
Photosynthetic carbon fixation is the most sustainable approach to capture carbon dioxide on Earth. Plants, cyanobacteria, and algae utilize photoenergy to convert atmospheric CO2 to various organic compounds supporting their growth and producing food. The mechanisms involved in photosynthesis and carbon fixation vary among species, influencing their carbon assimilation rates, metabolite synthesis, and ultimately determining their growth and productivity. However, the diversity of these mechanisms and the related regulatory components are not fully understood and rarely applied to increase agricultural yield.
We aim to enhance photoproduction by
- Discovering mechanisms or regulators across diverse species that can enhance carbon fixation, plant growth and yield through genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, molecular biology, biochemical studies, and AI supports.
- Introducing new-to-nature pathways or re-designing native mechanisms to increase carbon fixation and metabolite syntheses in cyanobacteria and crop plants.

Kuo-Chen Yeh
Distinguished Research Fellow and Director
Director (2019.1.16-present)
Interim Director (2016.10.1 -2019.1.15)
Director/Coordinator of Molecular and Biological Agricultural Sciences program of Taiwan International Graduate Program (TIGP-MBAS), Academia Sinica (2015-2020)
Distinguished Research Fellow (2024-present)
Research Fellow (2014-2024)
Associate Research Fellow (2009-2013)
Assistant Research Fellow (2001-2009)
PDF Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, USA (1999-2001)
Ph.D. Plant Biology Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, USA (1994-1999)