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Google’s Isomorphic Labs secures $600M to accelerate AI drug discovery
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Google’s bioscience arm Isomorphic Labs has secured $600 million in funding to accelerate its AI-driven drug discovery mission. The investment, led by venture capital firm Thrive Capital with participation from Google parent Alphabet, comes on the heels of impressive scientific achievements including Nobel Prize-winning work in protein structure prediction. This funding signals a major push to transform traditional pharmaceutical development by replacing time-consuming lab work with computational methods that can dramatically reduce drug discovery timelines.

The big picture: Isomorphic Labs, spun out from Google’s DeepMind AI research lab, is building on groundbreaking protein folding technology to revolutionize pharmaceutical development through computer simulation.

  • The company aims to eventually conduct most drug discovery processes via computers rather than traditional biological laboratories that require physical materials and substantial time investments.
  • The technology at Isomorphic’s core won its developers half of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, underscoring its scientific significance.

Behind the numbers: The $600 million investment was led by Thrive Capital, a venture firm with significant AI holdings including OpenAI, alongside Google Ventures and parent company Alphabet.

  • This external funding represents a strategic shift for Isomorphic, which until now has operated as a division within Google’s broader corporate structure.
  • The investment underscores growing confidence in AI’s potential to transform pharmaceutical research, a field traditionally characterized by high costs and lengthy development timelines.

The technology: Isomorphic builds on DeepMind’s AlphaFold system, which can predict the structure of millions of proteins and has expanded to model complex DNA and RNA behavior.

  • AlphaFold, now in its third iteration, has advanced to the point where it can forecast how biological molecules will interact and behave—critical knowledge for drug development.
  • The system’s capabilities have “promised to slash the development time of new drugs,” potentially addressing a key bottleneck in bringing treatments to market.

Key players: Demis Hassabis, who co-founded both DeepMind and Isomorphic Labs, shared half of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with researcher John M. Jumper for their work on AlphaFold.

  • Hassabis has positioned computational approaches as fundamentally more efficient than traditional lab-based drug discovery methods.

Why this matters: Pharmaceutical development traditionally takes years and billions of dollars, with high failure rates throughout the process.

  • AI-powered structural biology could potentially identify promising drug candidates faster and with greater precision, potentially reducing costs and accelerating timelines for bringing new treatments to patients.
Isomorphic Labs, Google’s A.I. Drug Business, Raises Money From Thrive

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