<code id='0C954E6166'></code><style id='0C954E6166'></style>
    • <acronym id='0C954E6166'></acronym>
      <center id='0C954E6166'><center id='0C954E6166'><tfoot id='0C954E6166'></tfoot></center><abbr id='0C954E6166'><dir id='0C954E6166'><tfoot id='0C954E6166'></tfoot><noframes id='0C954E6166'>

    • <optgroup id='0C954E6166'><strike id='0C954E6166'><sup id='0C954E6166'></sup></strike><code id='0C954E6166'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='0C954E6166'><label id='0C954E6166'><select id='0C954E6166'><dt id='0C954E6166'><span id='0C954E6166'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='0C954E6166'></u>
          <i id='0C954E6166'><strike id='0C954E6166'><tt id='0C954E6166'><pre id='0C954E6166'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          entertainment

          entertainment

          author:hotspot    Page View:98664
          Daphne Koller
          Insitro CEO and founder Daphne Koller Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for The New York Times

          SAN FRANCISCO — It took only a single, one-hour meeting in a Starbucks to convince venture capitalist Robert Nelsen that he was going to invest in the company being built by machine-learning whiz Daphne Koller. “She’s just an amazing force of nature,” said Nelsen, who invests for ARCH Venture Partners.

          Koller’s company, Insitro, in a matter of months raised over $100 million from big-name investors including ARCH, Foresite Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, and the firm that manages Jeff Bezos’ personal VC investments. (Koller refers to Bezos by his first name.) Now, it’s time for the next step. On Tuesday, the giant drug maker Gilead Sciences said it would pay Insitro $15 million — and up to $1 billion more down the line if it meets certain goals — for help in developing drugs to treat a common liver disease. It is the South San Francisco-based company’s first deal with a drug maker, and offers a test of whether artificial intelligence can remake drug development.

          advertisement

          The very nature of the financials emphasize the exciting but risky reality: The technology has great promise, but nothing is guaranteed.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families
          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families

          DuchennemusculardystrophyDr.EdwinP.Ewing,Jr./CDCPatFurlongwassittinginherhomeofficeinMiddletown,Ohio

          read more
          Readout LOUD podcast: How biotech is using artificial intelligence
          Readout LOUD podcast: How biotech is using artificial intelligence

          HasAIreallysolvedbiology?Whatcanmachinesteachusaboutmedicine?Andwhat’sadigitaltwin?Wecoverallthatand

          read more
          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions
          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions

          MikeReddyforSTATArtificialintelligenceisoftendescribedasablackbox:anunknowable,mysteriousforcethatop

          read more

          2023 Nobel Prize in Medicine goes to Karikó and Weissman

          AssociatedPressLONDON—TwopioneersofmRNAresearch—thetechnologythathelpedtheworldtamethevirusbehindthe