uBiome has raised $10.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
uBiome's investors include Plug & Play Ventures, ACME Capital, Batalion Capital, Coatue, Evolve VC, Fubu, Homebrew, Kleiner Perkins, Long Journey Ventures, Quiet Capital, The Hit Forge, ThirdLove.
uBiome was a San Francisco-based biotechnology company founded in 2012 that developed clinical tests sequencing DNA from human microbiome samples—primarily gut bacteria—to provide health insights directly to consumers or physicians.[1][2][5] It initially offered consumer wellness products like the Explorer kit, later pivoting to physician-ordered clinical tests amid pressure to scale revenue for venture funding, raising over $105 million from investors including Andreessen Horowitz and reaching a $600 million valuation by 2018.[1][2][3] The company served health-conscious consumers and doctors, aiming to solve the problem of inaccessible microbiome data for personalized health monitoring, but collapsed in 2019 due to fraudulent billing practices, FBI raids, founder resignations, and bankruptcy.[1][3][5]
uBiome emerged from academic curiosity about the human microbiome among UCSF Ph.D. students Zachary Apte and William Ludington in 2012, who were inspired by NIH's $173 million Human Microbiome Project to commercialize gut bacteria analysis.[2][4] Apte recruited entrepreneur Jessica Richman—previously at Google, McKinsey, and Lehman Brothers—whom he met via Start-Up Chile, an equity-free startup program; the trio launched as a crowdfunded citizen science project before transforming it into a venture-backed company (Ludington exited in 2013).[2][3][4][5] Richman and Apte, who later married, drove early traction with the 2013 Explorer consumer kit, then pursued clinical products and insurer reimbursements starting around 2014 to fuel aggressive growth, raising $105 million and an additional $83 million in 2018 Series C funding.[1][2][3]
(Note: These strengths eroded due to operational and legal issues, including fraudulent billing and misleading fundraising.[1][3])
uBiome rode the early 2010s microbiome hype, fueled by NIH initiatives and rising consumer interest in personalized gut health amid trends in direct-to-consumer biotech and precision medicine.[2][4] Timing aligned with venture capital's biotech boom, but uncharted regulatory waters for insurer-reimbursed microbiome tests amplified risks—market forces like high R&D costs and revenue pressures favored aggressive tactics over compliance.[1][3] It influenced the ecosystem by validating microbiome startups (spawning competitors) but ultimately highlighted pitfalls: spotlighting fraud risks in DTC health tech, prompting stricter DOJ scrutiny on billing and telemedicine, and underscoring tensions between Silicon Valley growth models and healthcare regulations.[1][3][5][6]
uBiome's 2019 bankruptcy and federal charges against cofounders Richman and Apte for securities and healthcare fraud conspiracies mark it as a cautionary tale rather than an active player—assets were liquidated, operations ceased, and legal fallout continues.[1][3][6] No revival is evident; instead, it shapes a maturing microbiome sector where survivors prioritize compliance amid advancing tech like AI-driven analysis and FDA oversight. Its legacy warns against prioritizing VC-fueled scale over ethics, potentially evolving investor due diligence in health tech—tying back to its origins as bold science commercialization that veered into collapse.
uBiome has raised $10.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $5.0M Series A in August 2014.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 1, 2014 | $5.0M Series A | Plug & Play Ventures | |
| May 1, 2014 | $5.0M Seed | ACME Capital, Batalion Capital, Coatue, Evolve VC, Fubu, Homebrew, Kleiner Perkins, Long Journey Ventures, Quiet Capital, The Hit Forge, ThirdLove, True Ventures, UP.Partners, Winklevoss Capital, David Marcus, Joshua Schachter, Kintan Brahmbhatt, Osama Bedier, Scott Belsky, Shervin Pishevar, Shri Ganeshram, Tim Ferriss |