Automata
company
Dimension
investor
Danaher
investor
Tru Arrow Partners
investor
Octopus Ventures
investor
Joinef
investor
The infusion of $45 million positions Automata to scale AI‑first lab automation, shortening drug‑discovery cycles and improving reproducibility for pharma and biotech. This move signals a broader industry shift toward software‑defined laboratory operations.
The rise of generative AI and large‑scale models has transformed computational biology, yet the physical execution of experiments remains a manual choke point. Traditional lab setups consist of disparate instruments, manual pipetting, and fragmented data capture, limiting throughput and reproducibility. Automata’s answer is a unified operating layer that stitches modular robotics, orchestration software, and a cloud‑native data backbone into a single, programmable environment. By abstracting the hardware into an API‑first platform, scientists can design experiments in code, trigger autonomous runs, and collect standardized data without human intervention.
The recent $45 million Series C, led by venture firm Dimension and bolstered by Danaher Ventures, Octopus Ventures, and Tru Arrow Partners, provides the financial runway to commercialize this vision at scale. A strategic investment from Danaher Corporation links Automata’s software stack with Danaher’s extensive portfolio of instruments, reagents, and analytics tools, creating end‑to‑end solutions for high‑throughput drug discovery. The round will fund rapid expansion of engineering, product, and customer‑success teams, as well as the next generation of closed‑loop experimentation software that can iteratively design, execute, and analyze experiments in real time.
For pharmaceutical giants and biotech innovators, the promise of AI‑ready labs translates into faster hypothesis testing, lower reagent waste, and more reliable data for model training. Automata’s growing roster of five leading pharma customers demonstrates early traction, and the company’s open, modular architecture lowers barriers for integration with existing workflows. As competitors race to embed AI into wet‑lab processes, Automata’s combined hardware‑software approach and Danaher partnership could set a de‑facto standard, accelerating the industry’s shift toward fully automated, data‑centric research pipelines.
Automata, a lab automation company, announced the close of a $45 million Series C round led by Dimension, with participation from Danaher Ventures, Tru Arrow Partners, Octopus Ventures, Entrepreneurs First and others. The round also includes a strategic investment partnership with Danaher Corporation, which added Murali Venkatesan to Automata’s board. The funding will be used to scale deployments, develop closed-loop experimentation software, and expand global engineering and customer success teams.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...