
Jan 13 (Reuters) - Gene sequencing company Illumina on Tuesday introduced a dataset that maps genetic changes to help accelerate drug discovery through artificial intelligence.
The company said it was partnering with drugmakers AstraZeneca, Merck and Eli Lilly for its Billion Cell Atlas, which will train advanced AI models at scale and advance research into fundamental disease mechanisms that have previously been out of reach.
Drug developers are increasingly adopting AI for discovery and safety testing to get faster and cheaper results, in line with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's push to reduce animal testing in the near future.
Drug development software maker Certara and biotechs such as Schrodinger and Recursion Pharmaceuticals are using the booming technology to predict how experimental drugs might be absorbed, distributed or trigger toxic side-effects.
"We believe the Cell Atlas is a key development that will enable us to significantly scale AI for drug discovery," said Illumina CEO Jacob Thaysen.
The Atlas will capture how 1 billion individual cells respond to genetic changes via CRISPR across more than 200 disease-relevant cell lines.
These cell lines have been selected for their relevance to diseases, many of which have been historically difficult to decode, including immune disorders and cancer as well as cardiometabolic, neurological and rare genetic diseases.
The Atlas will enable users to characterize drug and disease mechanisms of action, explore potential new indications and validate candidate targets from human genetics.
(Reporting by Christy Santhosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Doctors say changes to US vaccine recommendations are confusing parents and could harm kids - 2
Exploring the Difficulties of Co-Nurturing: Individual Bits of knowledge - 3
'Senseless violence' erupts at Christmas tree lighting; 4 injured - 4
Malaysia To Revive Search for Missing Flight MH370 - 5
Winter solstice 2025 marks the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere today
The wolf supermoon will kick off 2026 with a celestial bang. Here's when and how to see it.
More people are addicted to marijuana, but fewer of them are seeking help, experts say
Surveys of 6 Hot Savvy Beds
Embrace the Outside: Exercises and Entertainment
Become the best at Discussion: 6 Procedures for Progress
A somber Thor is returning for 'Avengers: Doomsday': Watch the dread-filled teaser
The 15 Most Motivating TED Discusses All Time
Exploring the Main Year of Life as a parent: Individual Encounters
Archaeologists uncover details about the Hjortspring boat's origins













