OpenAI launched GPT-Rosalind on April 17, 2026, a new AI model designed to support research in biology, drug discovery, and translational medicine.
The model is named after Rosalind Franklin, the scientist whose work helped reveal the structure of DNA.

Getting a new drug approved in the United States typically takes 10 to 15 years. OpenAI says GPT-Rosalind is built to speed up the earliest stages of that process.
The model is designed to help scientists work through large amounts of research literature, databases, and experimental data more quickly.
It supports tasks like literature review, hypothesis generation, experimental planning, and sequence-to-function interpretation.
GPT-Rosalind is available as a research preview through ChatGPT, Codex, and OpenAI’s API. Access is currently limited to qualified enterprise customers in the United States.
OpenAI also released a free Life Sciences research plugin for Codex. It connects to more than 50 scientific databases and tools.
On BixBench, a benchmark focused on real-world bioinformatics tasks, GPT-Rosalind scored 0.751, ahead of GPT-5.4 at 0.732 and Grok 4.2 at 0.698.
On LABBench2, the model outperformed GPT-5.4 on 6 out of 11 research tasks. Its strongest gain came in DNA cloning protocol design.
OpenAI also tested the model with Dyno Therapeutics using unpublished RNA sequences. The model ranked above the 95th percentile of human experts on a prediction task.
OpenAI is working with Amgen, Moderna, Novo Nordisk, Thermo Fisher Scientific, NVIDIA, Oracle Health and Life Sciences, the Allen Institute, Benchling, and UCSF School of Pharmacy.
Amgen’s Senior Vice President of AI and Data said the collaboration with OpenAI allows them to apply advanced tools in new ways to speed up how medicines reach patients.
Thermo Fisher Scientific, one of the named partners, has a market cap of around $191.76 billion. The company provides scientific instruments, lab equipment, and life science reagents.
Thermo Fisher carries a GF Score of 86 out of 100, with a Profitability Rank of 8/10 and a Growth Rank of 7/10.
Over the past three months, insiders at Thermo Fisher sold $8.2 million worth of shares, with no recorded insider buying in the same period.
The model is backed by Microsoft, which has a longstanding investment relationship with OpenAI.
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