Inventor · Chesterfield, MO, US

Sivalinganna Manjunath

11Patents
2h-index
31Co-inventors
50Inventor score

Filing activity: Jan 11, 2010 → Apr 5, 2022

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US10829773B2 Interfering with HD-Zip transcription factor repression of gene expression to produce plants with enhanced traits Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Active
US10724047B2 Methods and compositions for short stature plants through manipulation of gibberellin metabolism to increase harvestable yield Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Active
US10294486B2 Compositions and methods for altering flowering and plant architecture to improve yield potential Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US11414670B2 Methods and compositions for short stature plants through manipulation of gibberellin metabolism to increase harvestable yield Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US11319550B2 Methods and compositions for short stature plants through manipulation of gibberellin metabolism to increase harvestable yield Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US12024711B2 Methods and compositions for generating dominant short stature alleles using genome editing Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US12319922B2 Methods and compositions for short stature plants through manipulation of gibberellin metabolism to increase harvestable yield Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US8158851B2 Transgenic high tryptophan plants Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US11225671B2 Compositions and methods for altering flowering and plant architecture to improve yield potential Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US12110495B2 Compositions and methods for altering flowering and plant architecture to improve yield potential Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US11952579B2 Interfering with HD-Zip transcription factor repression of gene expression to produce plants with enhanced traits Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.