Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Nautilus Biotechnology is building a single-molecule proteomics platform to map and quantify the full human proteome at a scale and sensitivity previously impossible.
Nautilus Biotechnology is a proteomics company founded in 2016 and publicly listed on Nasdaq, developing a revolutionary platform for analyzing proteins at single-molecule resolution. While genomics has transformed medicine through DNA and RNA sequencing, the proteome is the actual functional layer of biology where drug targets, disease biomarkers, and therapeutic mechanisms operate. Nautilus is building a platform that can identify and quantify thousands of proteins simultaneously from tiny biological samples using a fluorescence-based single-molecule detection approach without requiring mass spectrometry. The platform promises to enable proteomics studies at a scale and depth comparable to what next-generation sequencing delivered to genomics, unlocking new insights into disease biology and drug development. Nautilus is in the instrument development phase and targets pharmaceutical research, clinical diagnostics, and academic biology. The company has raised over $250M and is building manufacturing capabilities for a planned commercial instrument launch that could define a new era in proteomics research.
Roche subsidiary and founding biotech; invented the biologics industry with recombinant DNA. Blockbuster oncology franchise includes Herceptin, Avastin, Rituxan, and Tecentriq.
Genentech was founded in 1976 in South San Francisco by Herbert Boyer and Robert Swanson, becoming the first company to produce human insulin using recombinant DNA technology and essentially launching the modern biotechnology industry. Acquired by Roche in 2009 for $46.8 billion, Genentech continues to operate with significant R&D autonomy as the US hub for Roche's pharmaceutical innovation.\n\nThe company is best known for pioneering cancer biologics, developing Herceptin (trastuzumab) for HER2-positive breast cancer, Avastin (bevacizumab) for multiple cancers, Rituxan (rituximab) for lymphoma, and Tecentriq (atezolizumab) for PD-L1 immunotherapy. Its discovery engine spans oncology, neuroscience, ophthalmology, and immunology with a robust early-stage pipeline leveraging AI-assisted target identification.\n\nGenentech generates tens of billions in annual revenue through Roche's Pharmaceuticals Division and remains one of the most productive biotech research sites in the world, consistently ranked among top employers in life sciences. The South San Francisco campus employs over 13,000 scientists, clinicians, and engineers, anchoring the Bay Area as a global biotech hub.
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