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Scientists solve 200-year-old puzzle of how tobacco plants make nicotine

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Why This Matters

The breakthrough in understanding how tobacco plants produce nicotine marks a significant advancement in plant biochemistry, enabling the development of safer biotechnological applications such as pharmaceutical production without nicotine contamination. This discovery opens new avenues for customizing tobacco plants for medical and industrial uses, potentially transforming the biotech industry. It also highlights the importance of fundamental research in unlocking long-standing scientific mysteries with real-world impact.

Key Takeaways

Scientists solve 200-year-old puzzle of how tobacco plants make nicotine

News

Posted on Monday 18 May 2026

Scientists have uncovered how tobacco plants naturally make nicotine, solving a mystery that has puzzled researchers for nearly two centuries.

The puzzle of how tobacco plants produce nicotine ha been around since the late 1820s

The discovery, published in Nature Communications, could lead to safer production of medicines and vaccines using tobacco plants, without the unwanted nicotine.

Nicotine, the chemical that makes tobacco products addictive, has been used by humans for over 10,000 years. But despite decades of study, scientists never fully understood how plants like Nicotiana tabacum - the main source of tobacco - actually build the nicotine molecule.

Scientists have now discovered the missing genes and enzyme that tobacco plants need to make nicotine, and recreated the process in the lab and inside living plants, proving how it works.

Contamination

Dr Benjamin Lichman, from the Centre for Novel Agricultural Products (CNAP) at University of York’s Department of Biology, said: “Tobacco plants can be used in biotechnology as platforms for producing vaccines or other pharmaceutical products, but it is plagued by the presence of nicotine which contaminates the products and requires processing to remove it.

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