For researchers — Bio-Scry
For researchers & labs

Serious genomics, on-site.

Complete circular assemblies, isolate typing, and comparative genomics — without booking cluster time or shipping your reads to a service. Bio-Scry runs the full workflow on the phone at your bench, in the field, or at the point of collection.

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What it does for your work.

Complete assemblies

The Spine assembler produces circular chromosomes and plasmids from Nanopore or HiFi reads — benchmarked at parity with a reference-grade assembler, on-device. The data →

Full isolate typing

Species ID, MLST, resistance and virulence screening, plasmid replicons and mobile elements — against bundled, versioned databases.

Comparative & outbreak

Whole-genome comparison, ANI, pangenomes, phylogenetics and single-linkage outbreak clustering across your isolates.

Reproducible & citable

Every typing and comparison result is stamped with the exact database version that produced it, and reports carry their methods and citations.

Works where you are

Fully offline. Useful at the bench, on fieldwork, or anywhere a reliable connection and a server aren't a given.

Batch & report

Push many isolates through a saved workflow and export publication-grade reports and standard files (FASTA, VCF, GenBank).

Data governance, solved by design

Your reads never leave the device.

There is no server that receives your sequences, so there is no data-transfer agreement to negotiate, no upload to justify, and nothing to leak. That matters for clinical, patient-derived, embargoed, or otherwise sensitive samples — the analysis simply happens where the sample is.

Who's using it this way.

If your work involves bacterial isolates and you'd rather not wait on a queue or a courier, it's for you.

Clinical & public-health microbiology Field & environmental research Core & teaching facilities Food, water & veterinary labs Low-resource & remote settings

Research & educational use only. Bio-Scry is not a certified diagnostic device. Its predictions are computational and must be confirmed by validated laboratory methods before any clinical use.