May 4, 2026
Bio-Shield: Biorisk Triage Orchestrator (BTO)
Jose Miguel Fierro Bustos
Zero-Trust defense-in-depth architecture for DNA synthesis screening. BTO is a modular Managed Access Wrapper for biodesign tools and a Layer-2 inspector for synthesizers. Combines Overlap-Layout-Consensus assembly (fragmented hazards), sliding-window ESM-2 PLM scanning (AI-obfuscated chimeric toxins), and cyber-entropy checks for digital malware.
This is a well-scoped systems concept that addresses real and important weaknesses in current biosecurity infrastructure. The combination of upstream controls, sequence reconstruction for split attacks, and embedding-based scanning reflects a good understanding of how attackers might operate.
The strongest part of your work is the systems thinking. You are not relying on a single detector, you are building a layered pipeline that acknowledges different failure modes. The explicit inclusion of OLC assembly for fragmented sequences is particularly useful and often overlooked.
The main limitation is that this remains an architectural proposal with limited empirical grounding.
I don't really see the benefit the approach provides, particularly in focusing on toxins. Toxins are generally quite easy to acquire; ricin can be made from caster beans. Although sure, chimeric toxins are harder to acquire, that's not something adversaries typically want or need. Toxins are generally assassination weapons, because they are highly difficult to aerosolize, and numerous easy, pre-existing methods exist for targeted killings such as regular ricin, guns, bombs, knives, rat poison, etc.
The Bioshield pipeline proposed integrates a multi-tiered approach to more robustly screen against various obfuscation approaches. The managed access feature of the pipeline is also interesting, but light on the validation and enforcement mechanisms. I am also skeptical about the predictive projector for such short fragments, but would be interested in seeing future work on it.
The paper appropriately acknowledges the limitations and next steps, given the short duration of the hackathon. The successes outlined in the paper are encouraging, and it will be interesting to validate the package against a larger dataset of sequences and provide more details on the implementation in screening tools.
Cite this work
@misc {
title={
(HckPrj) Bio-Shield: Biorisk Triage Orchestrator (BTO)
},
author={
Jose Miguel Fierro Bustos
},
date={
5/4/26
},
organization={Apart Research},
note={Research submission to the research sprint hosted by Apart.},
howpublished={https://apartresearch.com}
}


