We've continued to advance this critical platform. In March 2025, we announced positive greenhouse data for canola plants containing a third mode of action for sclerotinia resistance. This represents a significant milestone in our multilayered approach to create durable disease resistance very similar to how antiviral cocktails create lasting protection against diseases in humans like HIV. Our sclerotinia resistance trait in canola now offers multiple modes of action to provide durable resistance by reducing their reliance on fungicides and enable farmers to improve yields and lower input costs. This is particularly critical as sclerotinia or white mold is a fungal pathogen that causes significant disease in oilseed crops and most legumes, reducing canola yields by 7% to 15% with individual plant level yield losses being as great as 50% per infection. We're now preparing to conduct field trials for our third and fourth modes of action in canola in North America this summer, along with testing our first stacked disease resistance trait in controlled environment growth chambers. So let me now turn to the soybean platform. Our soybean platform reached a significant milestone in January when we successfully edited a soybean cell for our HT2 trait, achieving editing rates that enable expanded platform development. This achievement represents a critical step forward in our soybean strategy and positions us to continue pursuing both the HT2 trait and white mold resistance in soybean, potentially accessing a substantial market estimated at 125 million accessible acres with annual trait royalties per acre potentially in the range of $10 to $15. While we continue to work diligently toward a fully operational soybean platform, the success achieved early in the year validates our approach and technical capabilities. We expect to achieve HT2 edits in soybean plants later this year, building upon our successful cell edits from earlier this year. The company continues to work diligently toward a fully operational soybean platform. Soybean gene editing of complex traits like white mold resistance remains an area of significant commercial interest, and we continue to advance discussions with current and prospective partners who recognize the value of our time-bound and predictable approach to trait development. Which now brings me to our sustainable ingredients program. Within our sustainable ingredients program, we've advanced our bio-based fermentation bio fragrance products and now anticipate entering into commercialization agreements with consumer packaged goods partners this year. This quarter, we successfully completed the first stage scale-up of two bio fragrance products. This important advance affirms our expectation in realizing nominal revenues from this program later in 2025. In addition, our partner-funded project with a large multinational CPG company also continues to progress well. This work leverages our core crop gene editing capabilities to develop sustainable low-carbon ingredients, helping major global companies advance their sustainability objectives. So let's turn to regulatory. On the regulatory front, we achieved several historic milestones this quarter that strengthen our commercialization pathway. In February, the California Rice Commission's Rice Certification Committee approved our field research proposal, marking the first authorization for planting gene-edited rice in California. Additionally, in March, EU member states endorsed the EU Council's negotiating mandate on the regulation of class obtained by new genomic techniques or NGTs, enabling a three-way or trialogue discussions with the EU parliament, EU commission, and EU council to finalize legislation. In April 2025, the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock in Ecuador determined that Cibus, Inc.'s T1 and HT3 rice traits are equivalent to those developed through conventional breeding. This was a really important determination for our RTDS technologies as Ecuador strictly prohibits the commercial planting of transgenic or GMO crops. This determination confirms rice plants containing Cibus, Inc.'s T1 and HT3 traits may proceed with registration and commercialization in Ecuador in accordance with the provisions of organic law of agro biodiversity seeds, and promotion of sustainable agriculture, and its regulations, known as LOA FAS. And just two weeks ago, we were excited to announce that the USDA APHIS has designated two of our disease resistance trait products under development for canola as not regulated. This favorable designation confirms that our traits do not meet the definition of a regulated article, enabling us to proceed with product development without restrictions associated with regulated articles in the US. This USDA designation is especially significant as it further validates our RTDS technology platform that enables targeted genetic changes without integrating recombinant DNA. The US has long been a leader in regulatory modernization, and this designation represents yet another example of how regulatory frameworks have evolved and continue to evolve to support the promise of gene editing technologies. These regulatory developments across multiple geographies significantly strengthen the commercial opportunity for our trait pipeline and serve as important catalysts for our crop trait development business. So now let's look ahead to 2025. We have several important milestones we're focused on while simultaneously optimizing our operations. Expansion of commercial relationships with rice companies across North and South America, the first trait validation trials in Latin America with delivery of initial traits to customers by year-end, field trials for sclerotinia resistance in canola, the third and fourth modes of action, and trials of our first stacked disease resistance trait in controlled environment growth chambers. Initial field trial data for our HT2 trait in canola, continued development toward an operational soybean platform, and advancement of our biofragrance work with expected nominal revenues later this year. As we pursue these strategic priorities, we're laser-focused on optimizing our operations, significantly reducing our cash burn rate in 2025. We're taking a disciplined approach to resource allocation, prioritizing investments in near-term commercial opportunities with developed and advanced traits while ensuring we have the financial flexibility to execute on our strategic priorities and extend our runway. This balanced approach to growth and fiscal discipline positions us to maximize shareholder value as we approach key commercial milestones. Our gene editing technologies and focus on productivity traits hold great promise for the future of farming, enabling crops to be more adaptable to a changing environment and the changing demands of the global food supply chain. As demonstrated by our progress this quarter and over the past year, the opportunities for our gene-edited traits aren't in the distant future; they're materializing and expanding now. With our traits moving into customer germplasm, showing promising results in field trials, and a more harmonized global regulatory environment emerging for gene-edited traits, we are uniquely positioned within the agricultural gene editing industry to capture significant value for our shareholders. And with that, I'll hand over the call to Carlo for a financial update. Carlo?