biomni

Autonomous biomedical AI agent framework for executing complex research tasks across genomics, drug discovery, molecular biology, and clinical analysis. Use this skill when conducting multi-step biomedical research including CRISPR screening design, single-cell RNA-seq analysis, ADMET prediction, GWAS interpretation, rare disease diagnosis, or lab protocol optimization. Leverages LLM reasoning with code execution and integrated biomedical databases.

7 stars

Best use case

biomni is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Autonomous biomedical AI agent framework for executing complex research tasks across genomics, drug discovery, molecular biology, and clinical analysis. Use this skill when conducting multi-step biomedical research including CRISPR screening design, single-cell RNA-seq analysis, ADMET prediction, GWAS interpretation, rare disease diagnosis, or lab protocol optimization. Leverages LLM reasoning with code execution and integrated biomedical databases.

Teams using biomni should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/biomni/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sanand0/scientific-research/main/.claude/skills/biomni/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/biomni/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How biomni Compares

Feature / AgentbiomniStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Autonomous biomedical AI agent framework for executing complex research tasks across genomics, drug discovery, molecular biology, and clinical analysis. Use this skill when conducting multi-step biomedical research including CRISPR screening design, single-cell RNA-seq analysis, ADMET prediction, GWAS interpretation, rare disease diagnosis, or lab protocol optimization. Leverages LLM reasoning with code execution and integrated biomedical databases.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Biomni

## Overview

Biomni is an open-source biomedical AI agent framework from Stanford's SNAP lab that autonomously executes complex research tasks across biomedical domains. Use this skill when working on multi-step biological reasoning tasks, analyzing biomedical data, or conducting research spanning genomics, drug discovery, molecular biology, and clinical analysis.

## Core Capabilities

Biomni excels at:

1. **Multi-step biological reasoning** - Autonomous task decomposition and planning for complex biomedical queries
2. **Code generation and execution** - Dynamic analysis pipeline creation for data processing
3. **Knowledge retrieval** - Access to ~11GB of integrated biomedical databases and literature
4. **Cross-domain problem solving** - Unified interface for genomics, proteomics, drug discovery, and clinical tasks

## When to Use This Skill

Use biomni for:
- **CRISPR screening** - Design screens, prioritize genes, analyze knockout effects
- **Single-cell RNA-seq** - Cell type annotation, differential expression, trajectory analysis
- **Drug discovery** - ADMET prediction, target identification, compound optimization
- **GWAS analysis** - Variant interpretation, causal gene identification, pathway enrichment
- **Clinical genomics** - Rare disease diagnosis, variant pathogenicity, phenotype-genotype mapping
- **Lab protocols** - Protocol optimization, literature synthesis, experimental design

## Quick Start

### Installation and Setup

Install Biomni and configure API keys for LLM providers:

```bash
uv pip install biomni --upgrade
```

Configure API keys (store in `.env` file or environment variables):
```bash
export ANTHROPIC_API_KEY="your-key-here"
# Optional: OpenAI, Azure, Google, Groq, AWS Bedrock keys
```

Use `scripts/setup_environment.py` for interactive setup assistance.

### Basic Usage Pattern

```python
from biomni.agent import A1

# Initialize agent with data path and LLM choice
agent = A1(path='./data', llm='claude-sonnet-4-20250514')

# Execute biomedical task autonomously
agent.go("Your biomedical research question or task")

# Save conversation history and results
agent.save_conversation_history("report.pdf")
```

## Working with Biomni

### 1. Agent Initialization

The A1 class is the primary interface for biomni:

```python
from biomni.agent import A1
from biomni.config import default_config

# Basic initialization
agent = A1(
    path='./data',  # Path to data lake (~11GB downloaded on first use)
    llm='claude-sonnet-4-20250514'  # LLM model selection
)

# Advanced configuration
default_config.llm = "gpt-4"
default_config.timeout_seconds = 1200
default_config.max_iterations = 50
```

**Supported LLM Providers:**
- Anthropic Claude (recommended): `claude-sonnet-4-20250514`, `claude-opus-4-20250514`
- OpenAI: `gpt-4`, `gpt-4-turbo`
- Azure OpenAI: via Azure configuration
- Google Gemini: `gemini-2.0-flash-exp`
- Groq: `llama-3.3-70b-versatile`
- AWS Bedrock: Various models via Bedrock API

See `references/llm_providers.md` for detailed LLM configuration instructions.

### 2. Task Execution Workflow

Biomni follows an autonomous agent workflow:

```python
# Step 1: Initialize agent
agent = A1(path='./data', llm='claude-sonnet-4-20250514')

# Step 2: Execute task with natural language query
result = agent.go("""
Design a CRISPR screen to identify genes regulating autophagy in
HEK293 cells. Prioritize genes based on essentiality and pathway
relevance.
""")

# Step 3: Review generated code and analysis
# Agent autonomously:
# - Decomposes task into sub-steps
# - Retrieves relevant biological knowledge
# - Generates and executes analysis code
# - Interprets results and provides insights

# Step 4: Save results
agent.save_conversation_history("autophagy_screen_report.pdf")
```

### 3. Common Task Patterns

#### CRISPR Screening Design
```python
agent.go("""
Design a genome-wide CRISPR knockout screen for identifying genes
affecting [phenotype] in [cell type]. Include:
1. sgRNA library design
2. Gene prioritization criteria
3. Expected hit genes based on pathway analysis
""")
```

#### Single-Cell RNA-seq Analysis
```python
agent.go("""
Analyze this single-cell RNA-seq dataset:
- Perform quality control and filtering
- Identify cell populations via clustering
- Annotate cell types using marker genes
- Conduct differential expression between conditions
File path: [path/to/data.h5ad]
""")
```

#### Drug ADMET Prediction
```python
agent.go("""
Predict ADMET properties for these drug candidates:
[SMILES strings or compound IDs]
Focus on:
- Absorption (Caco-2 permeability, HIA)
- Distribution (plasma protein binding, BBB penetration)
- Metabolism (CYP450 interaction)
- Excretion (clearance)
- Toxicity (hERG liability, hepatotoxicity)
""")
```

#### GWAS Variant Interpretation
```python
agent.go("""
Interpret GWAS results for [trait/disease]:
- Identify genome-wide significant variants
- Map variants to causal genes
- Perform pathway enrichment analysis
- Predict functional consequences
Summary statistics file: [path/to/gwas_summary.txt]
""")
```

See `references/use_cases.md` for comprehensive task examples across all biomedical domains.

### 4. Data Integration

Biomni integrates ~11GB of biomedical knowledge sources:
- **Gene databases** - Ensembl, NCBI Gene, UniProt
- **Protein structures** - PDB, AlphaFold
- **Clinical datasets** - ClinVar, OMIM, HPO
- **Literature indices** - PubMed abstracts, biomedical ontologies
- **Pathway databases** - KEGG, Reactome, GO

Data is automatically downloaded to the specified `path` on first use.

### 5. MCP Server Integration

Extend biomni with external tools via Model Context Protocol:

```python
# MCP servers can provide:
# - FDA drug databases
# - Web search for literature
# - Custom biomedical APIs
# - Laboratory equipment interfaces

# Configure MCP servers in .biomni/mcp_config.json
```

### 6. Evaluation Framework

Benchmark agent performance on biomedical tasks:

```python
from biomni.eval import BiomniEval1

evaluator = BiomniEval1()

# Evaluate on specific task types
score = evaluator.evaluate(
    task_type='crispr_design',
    instance_id='test_001',
    answer=agent_output
)

# Access evaluation dataset
dataset = evaluator.load_dataset()
```

## Best Practices

### Task Formulation
- **Be specific** - Include biological context, organism, cell type, conditions
- **Specify outputs** - Clearly state desired analysis outputs and formats
- **Provide data paths** - Include file paths for datasets to analyze
- **Set constraints** - Mention time/computational limits if relevant

### Security Considerations
⚠️ **Important**: Biomni executes LLM-generated code with full system privileges. For production use:
- Run in isolated environments (Docker, VMs)
- Avoid exposing sensitive credentials
- Review generated code before execution in sensitive contexts
- Use sandboxed execution environments when possible

### Performance Optimization
- **Choose appropriate LLMs** - Claude Sonnet 4 recommended for balance of speed/quality
- **Set reasonable timeouts** - Adjust `default_config.timeout_seconds` for complex tasks
- **Monitor iterations** - Track `max_iterations` to prevent runaway loops
- **Cache data** - Reuse downloaded data lake across sessions

### Result Documentation
```python
# Always save conversation history for reproducibility
agent.save_conversation_history("results/project_name_YYYYMMDD.pdf")

# Include in reports:
# - Original task description
# - Generated analysis code
# - Results and interpretations
# - Data sources used
```

## Resources

### References
Detailed documentation available in the `references/` directory:

- **`api_reference.md`** - Complete API documentation for A1 class, configuration, and evaluation
- **`llm_providers.md`** - LLM provider setup (Anthropic, OpenAI, Azure, Google, Groq, AWS)
- **`use_cases.md`** - Comprehensive task examples for all biomedical domains

### Scripts
Helper scripts in the `scripts/` directory:

- **`setup_environment.py`** - Interactive environment and API key configuration
- **`generate_report.py`** - Enhanced PDF report generation with custom formatting

### External Resources
- **GitHub**: https://github.com/snap-stanford/biomni
- **Web Platform**: https://biomni.stanford.edu
- **Paper**: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.05.30.656746v1
- **Model**: https://huggingface.co/biomni/Biomni-R0-32B-Preview
- **Evaluation Dataset**: https://huggingface.co/datasets/biomni/Eval1

## Troubleshooting

### Common Issues

**Data download fails**
```python
# Manually trigger data lake download
agent = A1(path='./data', llm='your-llm')
# First .go() call will download data
```

**API key errors**
```bash
# Verify environment variables
echo $ANTHROPIC_API_KEY
# Or check .env file in working directory
```

**Timeout on complex tasks**
```python
from biomni.config import default_config
default_config.timeout_seconds = 3600  # 1 hour
```

**Memory issues with large datasets**
- Use streaming for large files
- Process data in chunks
- Increase system memory allocation

### Getting Help

For issues or questions:
- GitHub Issues: https://github.com/snap-stanford/biomni/issues
- Documentation: Check `references/` files for detailed guidance
- Community: Stanford SNAP lab and biomni contributors

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