Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Synthetic DNA manufacturing platform on silicon chips; $376M FY2025 revenue (+20% YoY). Supplies synthetic genes to 3,000+ customers across biotech, pharma, and AgBio.
Twist Bioscience was founded in 2013 in San Francisco by Emily Leproust, Bill Banyai, and Bill Peck, pioneering a silicon-based DNA synthesis platform that writes synthetic DNA at a fraction of the cost and error rate of conventional methods. By printing DNA on silicon wafers using a semiconductor-like process, Twist dramatically reduced the cost of synthetic genes from hundreds to single-digit dollars per gene, democratizing access to DNA writing for the life sciences.\n\nTwist serves over 3,000 customers across biopharmaceuticals, academic research, agriculture, and industrial biotechnology, offering synthetic genes, variant libraries, DNA data storage oligos, and antibody libraries for drug discovery. The company reported $376.6 million in FY2025 revenue, up 20% from $313 million in FY2024, driven by strong growth in its biopharma and drug discovery segments. Twist also operates a growing antibody drug discovery business, providing synthetic antibody libraries that power next-generation therapeutic discovery programs.\n\nTwist has a supply agreement with Ginkgo Bioworks for synthetic DNA to fuel Ginkgo's cell engineering platform, revised in 2025. The company is executing toward profitability, with improving gross margins as manufacturing scale increases. Its silicon-based DNA synthesis platform positions it as critical infrastructure for the emerging bioeconomy, synthetic biology, and DNA data storage industries.
Finch Therapeutics develops microbiome-based medicines targeting the gut-brain and gut-immune axis with programs in autism spectrum disorder and C. difficile.
Finch Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology company founded in 2015 that develops microbiome medicines targeting the relationship between the gut microbiome and systemic diseases. The company is focused on two primary therapeutic areas: gastrointestinal infections including C. difficile and conditions involving the gut-brain axis including autism spectrum disorder where gut microbiome alterations have been associated with symptom severity. Finch's lead microbiome program CP101 targets recurrent C. difficile infection, competing in the same emerging microbiome therapeutics space as Seres Therapeutics. The company also conducts research on the COMET platform for autism spectrum disorder, exploring whether microbiome restoration can improve behavioral symptoms through the gut-brain connection. Finch has raised over $165M and has conducted multiple clinical trials of its microbiome medicines. The company's autism program represents a particularly innovative and scientifically ambitious program given the emerging evidence that gut microbiome composition influences neurological development and behavior. Finch's work contributes to the broader scientific validation of microbiome medicine as a legitimate therapeutic class beyond C. difficile.
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