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Biostate AI closes $12M to bring the Netflix model to molecular diagnostics

Biostate AI closes $12M to bring the Netflix model to molecular diagnostics

May 20, 2025 Craig Etkin

The company is reimagining the fragmented reality of molecular research by building the world’s largest RNA sequencing dataset. This dataset will train a general-purpose AI to understand—and eventually guide therapies for—all human diseases.

Houston, TX – May 20, 2025 – Biostate AI, a leading innovator in artificial intelligence and RNA sequencing, announced the successful completion of a $12M Series A funding round, led by Accel. Additional investors included Gaingels, Mana Ventures, InfoEdge Ventures, and existing investors Matter Venture Partners, Vision Plus Capital, and Catapult Ventures. The company’s seed round also attracted notable angel investors, including Dario Amodei (CEO, Anthropic), Mike Schnall-Levin (CTO, 10x Genomics), and Emily Leproust (CEO, Twist Bioscience).

The funds will support the company’s mission to unlock affordable and integrated precision medicine, starting with RNA sequencing (RNAseq) services for US-based molecular research. 

The company’s immediate focus is revolutionizing RNAseq accessibility and developing clinically relevant predictive models. These technologies—and the requisite advances in data quality, integration of molecular data types, and rigorous clinical validation—serve as the foundations for Biostate’s long-term vision: truly personalized therapeutics.  

Founded by former professors and repeat entrepreneurs David Zhang and Ashwin Gopinath, Biostate was founded on the principle that the entire RNA transcriptome (rather than just small groups of RNA transcripts) is an underutilized real-time biomarker for human health. Until now, the comprehensive, simultaneous analysis of all RNA transcripts has been limited by cost and analytical barriers. 

By eliminating such industry bottlenecks, the Biostate co-founders realized they could snowball a cheaper and more effective RNAseq operation into a one-stop shop for precision medicine. 

Unlocking the power of RNAseq through GenAI

Currently, few molecular biology labs make the most of existing RNA datasets—or the power of machine learning to analyze them.  That’s because conventional RNAseq suffers from three key limitations:

  1. It’s expensive, pricing most labs out of scaling their biotech research ambitions. Plus, institutions are facing increasing pressure to maximize scientific output with fewer resources, as research budgets tighten under the current administration.
  2. Dataset aggregation from across research sites involves several technological and logistical headaches. Often, individual labs’ work introduces noise into the data, called batch effects, which drown out the often subtle clinical signs researchers are combing through the data for.
  3. Specialized vendor siloing leads to communication breakdowns, higher costs, and slower workflows.

Biostate is solving these problems through a combination of bio-chemical innovations as well as Gen AI tools packaged in a self-sustaining business model:

  • Cost: The company has invented and patented novel biomolecular technologies for turning tissue samples into RNAseq data at nearly an order of magnitude lower cost than traditional approaches, while being effective on both fresh and decades-old tissues. Their proprietary BIRT technology achieves this through an innovative multiplexing technique that allows simultaneous processing of multiple samples, while their PERD methodology separates signal from background noise without compromising quality. The result? Researchers can run 2-3 times more samples within existing budgets, dramatically expanding the scale of possible experiments.
  • Data aggregation: Lower costs translate internally as well, enabling Biostate to run internal experiments at a fraction of what competitors spend. This economic advantage facilitates the collection of millions of consented, de-identified RNAseq profiles from across the globe, similar to how OpenAI trained their base models on the entirety of the internet. This massive dataset fuels their ability to train increasingly sophisticated generative AI models that can identify patterns across different disease states and tissue types.
  • Standardization: Biostate’s unified workflow and consistent methodology allow experiments conducted across different timepoints and batches to be standardized. This uniformity is crucial as it enables their AI to consistently learn the “grammar of biology” without the confounding batch effects that typically plague multi-site studies. The standardization process also allows them to extract meaningful signals from small, de-identified data cohorts with detailed clinical labels, which they use to fine-tune their foundation models for specific applications.
  • Integration: The result is an integrated pipeline that transforms Biostate into a one-stop shop for molecular medicine. Their system converts biological samples into comprehensive transcriptome data that can be viewed holistically alongside their extensive datasets to generate actionable clinical insights—all under a single roof without requiring a web of specialized vendors. The company’s stack even includes sophisticated generative AI tools like Quantaquill for turning analysis results into publication-ready manuscripts, further streamlining the research workflow.

“Just as ChatGPT transformed language understanding by learning from trillions of words, we’re learning the molecular language of human disease from billions of RNA expressions from millions of samples,” said Ashwin Gopinath, co-founder and CTO of Biostate AI and a former MIT assistant professor. “We’re doing for molecular medicine what large language models did for text—scaling the raw data so the algorithms can finally shine.”

Translating—then eliminating—human disease

A personal origin story: Gopinath’s work is deeply influenced by his wife’s battle with leukemia. His background in engineering led him to dig into how such devastating diseases can be predicted. 

Paired with Zhang’s background in DNA research, the two discovered that RNA was an untapped middle ground of human health insights. Plus, they planned to build something that would last, hence the Netflix-inspired self-sustaining business model fueled by the company’s focus on home-grown AI. 

AI bridges molecular data and patient interventions: While LLMs like ChatGPT learn patterns from text, Biostate’s AI models identify expression signatures across thousands of genes, which all correlate with specific disease states and treatment responses. This enables its models to have detect subtle molecular changes that precede clinical symptoms by weeks, months, or even years, enabling earlier intervention.

“Rather than solve the diagnostics and therapeutics as separate, siloed problems for each disease, we believe that the modern and future AI can be general purpose to understand and help cure every disease,” said David Zhang, co-founder and CEO of Biostate AI, and former Associate Professor of Bioengineering at Rice University. “Every diagnostic I’ve built was about moving the answer closer to the patient. Biostate takes the biggest leap yet by making the whole transcriptome affordable.”

The AI developed from this wealth of RNAseq data will better inform clinicians of optimal treatment decisions. Biostate has already achieved internal proof-of-concept success for predicting disease recurrence in human leukemia patients. In the near future, the company plans to expand its collaborations with clinical partners in oncology, autoimmune disease, and cardiovascular disease.

An expanding client base: The firm has raised over $20 million to date and is growing its paying institutional customer base through a network of 100+ pilot projects across diverse disease indications, including leukemia (Cornell) and multiple sclerosis (Accelerated Cure Project). 

As a result, since commercializing its offering just two quarters ago, Biostate has run RNAseq on over 10,000 samples from over 150 collaborators and customers from leading institutions. The startup has also secured agreements to process several hundred thousand unlabeled samples annually, rapidly accelerating its dataset growth and powering AI development. 

About Biostate AI

Biostate AI is a startup building generative AI that predicts the evolution of human disease and drug response based on RNA sequencing data. Its patented wetlab technologies, including BIRT, allow affordable and scalable collection of massive amounts of transcriptomic and genomic data. With sites in Houston, TX, Palo Alto, CA, Bangalore, India, and Shanghai, China, Biostate AI is a global company with collaborations with top hospitals, academic researchers, and biotech/biopharma companies. Biostate AI was founded by serial entrepreneurs and former professors David Zhang (Rice U.) and Ashwin Gopinath (MIT) and is backed by top investors and experts including Accel, Dario Amodei (Anthropic), Emily Leproust (Twist Biosciences), and Mike Schnall-Levin (10X Genomics).

About Accel

Accel is a global venture capital firm that is the first partner to exceptional teams everywhere, from inception through all phases of private company growth. The firm helps ambitious entrepreneurs build iconic global businesses. For more information, visit https://www.accel.com/

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AI might be great at helping engineers write code, but it’s creating a new problem – all that code still needs to be reviewed by humans. CodeAnt AI is stepping in with a solution that uses AI to tackle the review process itself, raising $2 million in seed funding to help engineering teams move faster without sacrificing quality or security. The funding, CodeAnt AI’s first institutional round, values the company at $20 million. It will be used to expand the engineering and business development teams and to scale CodeAnt AI’s code quality and application security platform. For engineering teams already feeling the pressure to ship faster, the investment comes at the perfect time. The funding round was led by Y Combinator, VitalStage Ventures, and Uncorrelated Ventures, and with participation from DeVC, Transpose Platform, Entrepreneur First, and a number of marquee angel investors.

In a statement, Amartya Jha, Co-founder and CEO of CodeAnt AI said, “As AI-driven coding becomes widespread, the real bottleneck isn’t writing code — it’s reviewing it,” “Today, when a developer submits a change request, it often sits idle for hours or even days waiting for peer review. And even when a reviewer does pick it up, they rarely have full context of the code change. This is a critical risk point: most software bugs and vulnerabilities slip through at the peer review stage, where issues could have been caught early and cheaply.”

As AI continues to transform how code gets written, CodeAnt AI is positioning itself as the bridge to a future where code can be both rapidly created and confidently deployed. The founders envision a world where AI doesn’t just help developers write code faster, but also ensures that every line shipped to production is secure, efficient, and ready for the real world – giving engineering teams the confidence to move at the speed their businesses demand.
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Building on its 120-year tradition of caring for Northern Californians, Sutter Health today announced a transformational plan to expand access to its comprehensive, integrated and coordinated high-quality care across the greater East Bay region. As part of this phased approach, Sutter will construct a flagship campus in the City of Emeryville featuring a regional destination ambulatory care complex and a new medical center with an initial capacity of up to 200 beds and room for future expansion. The plan prioritizes recruiting primary care and specialty physicians, reducing barriers for patients when scheduling appointments and obtaining referrals for care, and investing in programs and partnerships to strengthen the healthcare workforce.  

In a statement Warner Thomas, president and CEO of Sutter Health said, “Our Emeryville campus project represents one of the most significant investments we’re making across our system over the next decade and is part of our broader vision to meet the community’s growing demand for expanded access to our services across the East Bay footprint,” “Too many people face challenges in accessing the care they need. At Sutter, we’re committed to breaking down those barriers—expanding care facilities, enhancing imaging capabilities, improving online appointment scheduling and collaborating with the Sutter East Bay Medical Group and our community physician partners to attract more primary and specialty care physicians. 

 
Sutter is investing more than $1 billion to expand services across the East Bay, ensuring patients will be able to conveniently reach comprehensive care within a 15-minute drive from home or work. At the heart of this regional expansion is the newly acquired, 12-acre Sutter Emeryville Campus at Horton and 53rd streets, which will serve as a key healthcare destination.  When complete, the approximately 1.3 million square foot, new medical campus in the heart of Emeryville, will offer outpatient services at two existing buildings totaling approximately 530,000 square feet, at 5555 Hollis Street and 5300 Chiron Street, plus acute care services at a newly constructed medical center adjacent to the Hollis Street property. The Sutter Emeryville campus will also offer medical office space and parking at an existing 1,992-space parking garage.
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Saica Group will begin construction this month on a $110 million expansion project in Anderson Indiana. Saica Group is one of the largest and most advanced European players in the development and production of recycled paper for corrugated packaging. Saica expects to start operations during Q4 2026 and plans to create more than 50 well-paid full-time jobs during the first two years of operation and more than 100 after the facility has completed its ramp-up phase some years after the startup. Designed with future growth in mind, the new facility will have almost 350,000-square-feet and will include manufacturing, converting and production areas, along with a warehouse and office space. 

In a statement Susana Alejandro, President and CEO of Saica Group, said: “Saica is committed to stability and long-term growth in the US. This investment is the proof that we are moving forward with our plans in the American continent as we are convinced that we can provide products that will differentiate us in a crowded market. It reflects our deep commitment to delivering exceptional service, as we believe our knowledge and experience in the production of recycled lightweight papers and corrugated packaging will bring high performance packaging to the US market while becoming more efficient in the use of materials”. 

Saica Group has been in business since 1943 and has a long track record of stable growth in the production of recycled paper and the packaging industry. Saica Group is a family-owned multinational company that cares about people, their well-being and their professional development. Currently the company employs more than 12,000 employees and has a revenue of 3.963 Billion dollars.
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