07/08

by Buck Institute

The Buck Institute for Research on Aging and Fennec Engineering Partner to Build the Safety Infrastructure for Biological AI

Fennec and the Buck Institute partner to unite longevity science, functional safety, and autonomous systems engineering to make AI-driven biological research trustworthy at scale.

 

The Buck Institute for Research on Aging and Fennec Engineering today announced a partnership to explore and support the specialized safety infrastructure required for developing biological AI systems responsibly. The partnership brings together more than 25 years of Buck's scientific research expertise and Fennec's proven functional safety frameworks to solve a defining engineering challenge: ensuring that generative AI operating within complex biological systems does so reliably, predictably, and with full accountability.

Meeting the Moment in Biological AI

As AI takes on a greater role in biological research, it introduces new safety challenges: black box AI models can produce novel biological structures with no historical analog, making traditional checklist-based risk assessment and validation insufficient. Buck and Fennec are addressing this through an integrated framework that hardwires automated safety guardrails directly into AI-driven biological simulations, anchored in the fundamental cause-and-effect mechanisms of biology itself. The result is a system capable of predicting and neutralizing emergent risks before they leave a digital simulation environment, or what the partners call proactive trust.

Buck Faculty member James Yurkovich, PhD leads the Laboratory for Applied Systems BioAI and is spearheading this partnership. "As we continue to utilize more and more AI in our research into biological simulation, building out the necessary safety guardrails is crucial," said Dr. Yurkovich. "This partnership empowers us to move at the speed required for this burgeoning field with the confidence that safety is the number one priority."

"The functional safety principles that govern autonomous systems and humanoid robotics apply directly here," said Justin Croyle, Chief Product Officer at Fennec Engineering. "When AI operates in uncharted territory, safety has to be built from first principles rather than inherited from a traditional checklist. That's what this partnership is addressing."

Two Organizations, One Shared Mission

The Buck Institute is the only independent U.S. research institution solely focused on the connection between aging and chronic disease, with a mission to extend human healthspan. Fennec Engineering brings deep expertise in functional safety and systems validation, with roots in Amazon Robotics and a track record that includes enabling the certification of more than one million robotic systems worldwide.

Together, they are building the safety supply chain that allows biological AI to fulfill its potential in precision medicine and longevity research.


About Fennec Engineering: Fennec Engineering builds the safety infrastructure for autonomous systems, robotics, and AI, delivering an end-to-end platform, from concept through certification. We unify safety across the supply chain, eliminating regulatory guesswork, and helping teams bring certified innovations to market faster. Fennec ensures that safety moves at the speed of innovation. Learn more at https://fennec-engineering.com/ and https://www.linkedin.com/company/fennec-engineering/

Media Contact

Betsy Barry, Fennec Engineering, 1 7062067271, betsy.barry@fennec-engineering.comhttps://fennec-engineering.com/

Robin Snyder, The Buck Institute, 1 415-420-9905, RSnyder@buckinstitute.orghttps://www.buckinstitute.org/

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SOURCE Fennec Engineering

Science is showing that while chronological aging is inevitable, biological aging is malleable. There's a part of it that you can fight, and we are getting closer and closer to winning that fight.

Eric Verdin, MD, Buck Institute President and CEO

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