Slashdot Mirror


Biotech Genome Patents Invalidated?

bruthasj writes "The Boston Globe has a piece about all the Biotechs grabbing patents that dealt with segments of the Human Genome. It appears there are work arounds and that the USPTO basically disregards further patents on the genome. As one quoted: ''The land grab is over''. Read about it here."

44 of 148 comments (clear)

  1. Land Grab is Over? by Talez · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What about current patents?

    Was this orchestrated by people who already have patents?

    If they do keep the current patents, how can they justify not allowing patents to be set while keeping other patents? Isn't it just a case of double standards?

    1. Re:Land Grab is Over? by mooZENDog · · Score: 2, Informative

      If they do keep the current patents, how can they justify not allowing patents to be set while keeping other patents? Isn't it just a case of double standards?

      I don't think it'll be like that. I think this new ruling means that everything concerning the human genome is public domain now - makes sense really, general good of humanity and all that :)

      --

      ---
      "An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind" - Gandhi
    2. Re:Land Grab is Over? by boaworm · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I think the whole process is moving away from patenting a gene to patenting a use of that gene. About a year ago I attended a presentation by the President of Decode Genetics (Decode.is) and the main issue there was that, at the time, it was all a race about "finding" a gene, patent it, and moving on. Noone cared by the time to find out what the genes really did, because then there were less genes left to research for later. They had to prove some sort of use for the gene before a patent could be issued, so what they did was that they mixed some substance including the gene into catfood (yes.. catfood). They put up a video camera and waited until Mr Cat preferred eating the modified food, and bang they had their "use", thus their patent.


      This allowed very fast gene patenting and allowed stockpiling genes for later use/research.

      This whole thing with overthrowing/invalidating patents is not a big surprise, instead of having a universal patent for the gene, many companies now have loads of new ingredients for catfood, while others can go on about their business. Bon apetit Mr Cat :-)

      If you think this sound too unlikely/silly, have a look in the patent registry files :-)

      --
      Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
      Aristotele
  2. Leaps and Grounds by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This brings up again the interesting debate on whether information can be copyrighted by the one whom merely discovered the information, regardless of the fact that the information existed to begin with. Personally, I feel that human DNA is rather obviously public domain...otherwise one is forced to consider the ludicrous situation of one being forbidden to sequence one's own DNA, lest a copyrighted segment result. This is akin to being forbidden to read a CD because the code contained therin is copyright.

    1. Re:Leaps and Grounds by l810c · · Score: 4, Insightful
      DNA, Periodic Table, Physical Laws...etc...

      I don't it should be possible to patent 'information' that is by its own existence 'prior art'. Processes to extract, create, manipulate this information should be patentable.

    2. Re:Leaps and Grounds by k98sven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't it should be possible to patent 'information' that is by its own existence 'prior art'. Processes to extract, create, manipulate this information should be patentable.

      It isn't.
      What biotech patents are all about is "using information x to do y",
      for example: "using a breast-cancer gene to detect patient suspectibility to breast-cancer".. etc

      The problem with biotech patents is that these claims are vague, and the application in question is often obvious.
      That's where the problem is

    3. Re:Leaps and Grounds by the+gnat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fair enough. But there's two ways to go about it:

      1. You discover a gene, and patent it. In the worst case, everyone is prohibited from doing research involving this gene without your approval for 17 years. Even if you're incapable of doing anything with it, like most of the companies with huge numbers of gene patents.

      2. You discover a gene, and copyright your database. Others who wish to use your data pay you for access to the database. Anyone who doesn't want to pay can find the damn gene themselves, which takes time and money but isn't illegal.

      Celera primarily chose (2), and received far more abuse than it deserved for their choice. They certainly shouldn't have been forced to make any of their data public*, but they shouldn't be able to prevent competitors from working on the same project.

      Part of the problem is that molecular biology moves so quickly that a copyright may be useless after a few years. A patent, however, can cripple a promising area of research. Given that most basic research is done by academics, and having read enough articles about scientists getting screwed by companies, I'm inclined to side strongly against gene patents.

      (* Except where required for publication in a journal.)

  3. what about by jsse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    previous patents? I think USPTO should admit their mistake and invalidate them too.

  4. Talk about double jeapordy... by kryonD · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just imagine being told you have cancer....and then being handed a law suite for not licensing the process of mutating human DNA.

    If only the USPTO would wake up to other scemes like this.

    --
    I've dirtied my hands writing poetry, for the sake of seduction; that is, for the sake of a useful cause. --Dostoevsky
    1. Re:Talk about double jeapordy... by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You paint this to be a kind of extreme worse-case scenario...

      And yet, you shouldn't doubt for a moment that if large corproations could charge you or garnishee your wages simply for getting cancer, they would. I mean, think of how many people get cancer! And by extension, think of the profits! Definitely worth the "investment" in a couple of patents here or there.

      This is the world of Ayn Rand. These are the evils of capitalism. The combination of a patent system run amok and technologies which involve human DNA have given us a glimpse into just how evil capitalism can become... it just goes to show that whether you believe in capitalism or not, you must at least be willing ot put checks on it, lest it rise up and own you and your children (literally).

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    2. Re:Talk about double jeapordy... by valisk · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sorry to disagree but this is not capitalism, this is Corporate Mercantilism.
      Capitalism is free trade, in every way no barriers no 'protected' marketplaces, what we see today is the rhetoric of the free market combined with protectionist legislation.
      These government built barriers such as Patents and Copyrights are a hang over from the days of Mercantilism and have been enhanced and extended at the request of the corporations until we have what have here today, a system of byzantine complexity which encourages and rewards those who obscure and lie and more importantly already have lots of money to buy the next set of laws.
      By the way in most countries Corporations do charge you for having cancer, they are the ones providing your care and drugs, even in the UK under the National Health service, the 'Back' office is increasingly run by private corporations.

      --

      Economic Left/Right: -0.62
      Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.69
  5. I just don't understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This seems asinine to me. How can somebody claim a patent on genes?? Isn't that like patenting gravity or sunlight?? I thought you had to invent something to patent it. Marconi patented the radio, he didn't patent radio waves. (and yes i realize he may not have patented the radio, but it did sound good. :)

    1. Re:I just don't understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I thought you had to invent something to patent it. Marconi patented the radio, he didn't patent radio waves. (and yes i realize he may not have patented the radio, but it did sound good. :)

      The funny thing about that is Marconi tried to patent his radio device but the patent office, becouse the device only worked short distances, said that it had no use. If that isn't irony I don't know what is. :)

      hook

    2. Re:I just don't understand by Lars+Arvestad · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I don't think anyone simple claimed a patenet on a gene, because you had and have to claim a utility of it. What happened was that people/companies found a gene or even a small part of a gene, sent it to a patent office and claimed "Uh, this is a gene, and, like, we could cure cancer or something with it, so we want to patent that any other use of it." The support for the utility did not have to be very good and the patent would still go through. The applicant may in reality not have a clue about the gene more than that it was most likely a gene and it looked like something else that people knew might be used for something, at least in worm or fly or some other model organism...

      So it was more like people said "I want to patent the use of gravity to cure cancer. I have no idea how to go about with it, but darn it I am the one to prosper from it would a use someday appear!"

      --
      Reality or nothing.
  6. Oops! by mooZENDog · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't think it'll be like that. I think this new ruling means that everything concerning the human genome is public domain now

    Oops! I stand corrected... The new patents are now refused, and (quoting from the article):
    "companies have figured out ways to work around issued patents for specific genes and proteins."

    So it seems to be saying that although the previous patents have not been invalidated, there are workarounds.

    --

    ---
    "An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind" - Gandhi
  7. It makes a great cocktail garnish by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    ''In the early days, a company could say, in effect, that if you accumulated enough of the gene, you could fill a vessel with it and use it as a paperweight - there was the utility,'' said Bruce Sunstein, a partner at Bromberg & Sunstein LLP in Boston, only partly in jest.

    Ironically, this is an argument that cannot be used to defend a software patent.

  8. do they even check? by 7-Vodka · · Score: 4, Insightful
    does the patent office even check if the submissals actually exist/work whatever as claimed?

    or do they just pay 10,000 monkeys to read through it then rubber stamp it?

    I read the whole article and I don't see anything that mentions how these patents are actually checked/verified.

    just says they're getting 'stricter'. Well boo-hoo. Before they just rubberstamped any shite that came thru, and now you have to tell them a little bit about the shite before they rubberstamp it without checking.

    --

    Liberty.

    1. Re:do they even check? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

      They're adding the requirement that you have to show a real invention that uses the gene for a real, useful purpose. Before, companies were sequencing genes like mad and running to the patent office armed with bundles of CD-Rs full of A, C, T, and G. That isn't considered good enough anymore. Basically you have to present them with something like a mechanism of action for a drug.

      This isn't perfect for several reasons:

      -The genes themselves are discoveries, not inventions, should never have been patentable in the first place, and should still not be patentable now even if it is harder to do so. (The fact that a lot of money was spent does not change this.)

      -A gene patent is publicly disclosed after 18 months, which tips off competition that the gene might be interesting for further research. Companies will be more reluctant to patent genes, and will simply choose to keep them a secret instead. Since the patents turned out to be strategically worthless anyway, this could be a bad development from the perspective of technological and scientific advancement.

      -The tighter rules mean fewer useless gene patents will come in, freeing up a number of USPTO examiners, which means more time to rubber stamp other unrelated, and perhaps more damaging, patents.

    2. Re:do they even check? by umofomia · · Score: 5, Interesting
      does the patent office even check if the submissals actually exist/work whatever as claimed?

      or do they just pay 10,000 monkeys to read through it then rubber stamp it?

      More like the latter... according to this Scientific American article, designs for perpetual motion machines make it through all the time.
  9. It'd be like patenting air... by dWhisper · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The patent should never have been approved, since the actual DNA sequence is taken from a natural source, and beyond that, is the core for all genetic research. No cancer research center trying to eliminate the sequences for cancer risk should have to fill out patent permission paperwork.

    It makes me wonder what other naturally occouring substances we could analyze and then later patent. The universities that have discovered the various sub-atomic particles don't hold any exclusive rights.

    The whole idea behind it is money, or the rights to make anyone trying to do scientific research based on the genome give something up for the right to use the common human sequence.

  10. Re:Fighting software patents by chrisos · · Score: 4, Funny
    translate some patented software to base 2 (A,C,G,T)

    Surely ACGT is four bases, hence base 4. Base 2 is binary, your basic 0 and 1.

    Of course you could encode two bits of binary information to create a base four digit.

    BTW, I am prepared to consider that I have dropped though a hole in the space-time fabric into a parallel universe with differing number theory (I have been playing with chroniton particles and theta-band radiation today) :)

    Remember kids, 1 + 1 = -17 (On a complex plane)
    --
    If nature abhors a vacuum, why isn't there more dust in the world?
  11. What a surprise by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    All along the way to make money from genomics was not to file patents.
    The way to make money is to cure disease, repair injuries, and extend life. I'm glad it only took a few years to clear THAT up.

    Now let's hope Bush doesn't have too many of our best and brightest running from his lynch-the-cloners plan.

    --

    Operator, give me the number for 911!
    1. Re:What a surprise by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 4, Funny

      At least his bible belt texan redneck outlook means there is no danger of Bush being cloned. thank f*&k for that!!!!

      --
      OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
  12. Knuth said it best ... by zonix · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When we start thinking of complexity issues, we have to change our viewpoint as to what is in nature and what is invented.

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
  13. new gold rush? by psyclone · · Score: 2, Insightful

    seems like we're in a crazy new age of intellectual property being the new gold. I wonder what other areas of research should be limited on new issued patents. Will there soon be a trend of lowering the patent issue rate for all types of patents? Or is this only local to genetics..

  14. something people are overlooking... by zonker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    while i wholeheartedly agree that patenting things like genes seems obviously public domain and incredibly prior art, there is a bigger issue at hand... money.

    several people in my family are scientists involved in genetic engineering and we have had this discussion many times. the point that they make is that pharmaceutical companies must be able to secure their findings to pay for the research they do to find these genes and produce drugs to treat various diseases. remember that companies like merck aren't doing research like this because they are simply curious, no instead they want to find things like the cure for cancer or diabetes or aids or the common cold because it makes them money.

    this research is ungodly expensive, so the drug companies want to make sure that if they did the research and found something, their competitors won't be able to cash in on it before they do. or worse yet, some company in asia making pills for next to nothing. this is their greatest fear, and this is why they patent things like there is no tomorrow.

    while i still find it morally and ethically wrong to patent things like genes, i can't come up with a better way for these companies to do their business. and as much as i'm not into big businesses, i do like staying healthy...

    1. Re:something people are overlooking... by The_DOD_player · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ofcourse the medical industry need money to finance their research.
      But you cant justify anything only on the fact that you need money. We have people robbing banks because they need money -- does that make them right?

      So no, money is NOT the bigger issue here.

    2. Re:something people are overlooking... by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They can still patent developments from genes. They simply can't patent the genes themselves. There is a big difference between isolating the genes responsible for a certain type of heart complaint, and using those genes to develop a treatment. They still get repayed for their investment. It's just that the bar has been raised. They need something with a direct application rather than something that may or may not be required for a certain application.

      This does mean that they may be obliged to discover the genes themselves before developing the treatment, but they have the ability to do this. They can simply rely on trade secrets laws to prevent others from using the gene sequence, and equally, they can licence trade secrets. Their payoff is from the patent on the treatment, not the genes.

      The benefit is that this does still encourage information sharing, but also prevents extortionate charging for the root IP. You can choose to licence the information, or if the other company charges too much, you can simply rediscover it yourself. The risk that another company would start charging unfair amounts was a disincentive to actually develop anything based on publically available genes.

    3. Re:something people are overlooking... by the+gnat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Damn straight. The other distinction is that genes are found as part of basic research, whereas drugs (which I absolutely think should be protected) are an actual useful product. Gene patents are simply being used as a stranglehold on basic research by competitors; companies file huge numbers of patents because they're hoping that somewhere down the line, somebody else's research pays off and then that other group will be forced to share the wealth.

      Science is all about risks. The purpose of the patent system is not to reward risk or investment, but to promote the development of useful stuff.

  15. Umm.... by Oxygen99 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Doesn't anyone else think patenting genes is a little bit too much like this for comfort?

    Who said satire was dead? Woo-hoo!

    --
    I had a dream, bright and carefree, but now there's doubt and gravity
  16. Copyright by Dusabre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Like I mentioned in the other post, COPYRIGHT is something different to a patent.

    Copyrights on human gene sequences cannot be given. Why? Because an 'author' gains copyright. Nobody can author something that other people carry with them from birth as a chemical sequence. Even if a sequence was copyrightable then you would not have to license your DNA from Big Bad Corp because you are carrying it a chemical form, not a sequence of letters, etc etc.

    A patent on a practical usage of a sequence is a completely different matter. Inventions using already occuring elements are fine under law and fine for most people. If somebody patents ATATATAT as a sequence used in a drug to boost human intelligence, then they're creating a new drug using that sequence, in the same way that a hydrogen engine uses naturally occuring metals and hydrogen to push a car. Usage is key and it seems that the Patent Office is pushing the usage aspect. Thankfully.

    1. Re:Copyright by ndogg · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, you just wait until that God(TM). guy sends you a cease and desist letter...

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
  17. Well, duh... by DarklordJonnyDigital · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How the hell do they expect to not claim they've never found previous effects of chunks of DNA before they patented it?

    "Guys, guys! You'll never guess what I just invented! It's a chemical that allows this thing I call photosythesis! We could use it to allow plants to get their energy directly from sunlight instead of... oh. Nevermind."

  18. Gene sequences are not inventions by emh0 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I really don't see how gene sequences are patentable anyway - I always understood that patents were to protect inventions. Gene sequences are discoveries, not inventions - there is a big difference.

    There is also the ridiculous situation where everyone is surely in breach of the patent, since everyone contains a copy of the patented DNA.

    1. Re:Gene sequences are not inventions by sconeu · · Score: 2, Informative

      To play Devil's Advocate....

      I really don't see how gene sequences are patentable anyway - I always understood that patents were to protect inventions. Gene sequences are discoveries, not inventions

      From Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution:

      "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;"

      Emphasis is mine.

      DISCLAIMER: I do not believe gene sequences should be patentable (unless they are wholly synthetic sequences that do not occur in nature). I am simply playing Devil's Advocate to the OP.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  19. Beginner's guide to gene patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Beginner's guide to gene patents

    Special report: the ethics of genetics

    James Meek
    Wednesday November 15, 2000
    The Guardian

    What is a patent?
    A patent is a kind of licence granted by a government to an inventor. It gives the inventor the right, through the courts, to stop rivals from making, using or selling an invention without his or her permission. When a patent is granted, the invention becomes the property of the inventor. However the patent can be bought, sold, rented or hired.
    How long does a patent last?
    Normally 20 years. After that, anyone can use the invention without restrictions.

    Who issues patents?
    In Britain, the UK Patent Office. But Britain is a signatory to the European Patent Convention, so inventions patented in one of 19 other European countries can have patent protection here too through the European Patent Office. Under the Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement, which came into force in 1995, almost the entire world is supposed to have acquired similar patent rules.

    What are the criteria for granting a patent to an inventor?
    An invention must be novel - no-one else can have made it public; innovative - it can't be a development which would be obvious to specialists in the relevant field; and useful - it has to aid a practical human activity. It cannot be simply a discovery.

    But surely genes are pure discoveries?
    So opponents of gene patenting argue. They also point out that with modern automated gene analysis techniques, the non-obviousness of genes is becoming doubtful. Supporters of gene patenting say gene function is not obvious and that genes are not mere discoveries because the genes are patented together with inventive descriptions of how they can be used for diagnosis or therapy.

    So what living things can be patented?
    Naturally-occurring life forms, from plankton to people, cannot. But genetically engineered plants and animals, such as GM maize or lab mice designed to be prone to cancer, can. So can the naturally-occurring chemical codes and substances which allow all plants and animals, including humans, to function on a cellular level - like genes, or hormones - as long as the 'inventor' can specify a use for them.

    Why should anyone want to patent something which occurs in nature?
    Holding a patent on a human, plant or animal gene gives the holder control over commercial exploitation of that gene. If it's a human gene, that may involve diagnosis or therapy for a disease; if plant or animal, it may also involve disease, the promotion of a desirable characteristic like a sweet taste, or the transfer of the gene from one organism to another.

    If someone has patented something which occurs naturally in my body, do I have to pay them?
    No. Confusingly, a naturally-occurring gene can be patented as an isolated sequence, but not a gene in its natural state.

    Can someone use a patent to block research?
    Yes and no. One of the claimed advantages of the patent system is that it obliges the inventor to publish details of his or her invention, allowing academic scientists to study it. But as soon as a researcher tries to make commercial use of developments based on the original patent - by going into partnership with a drugs firm, for instance, or charging patients at cost for a genetic test - the patent holder can step in to stop them, or oblige them to pay a licence fee.

    How important are patents for innovative companies?
    Traditionally very important, as inventor James Dyson's recent victory over Hoover in the bagless vacuum cleaner wars showed. Many biotech companies, big and small, argue that genes must be patentable to allow firms to recoup their investment in identifying them. But other firms fear allowing genes to be patented before any specific, proven use has been established for them will hold back medical advances.

    Can governments override patents?
    Yes, if they feel it is vital for the public good, and the patent holder is being too restrictive.

    What would be the impact on the economy if gene patenting was banned?
    Unknown. The majority within the biotech lobby argues that it would discourage investment in genetic research. Yet the cost of identifying the function of a gene is a fraction of the cost of turning that gene into something useful, like a drug. There is an argument that the pharmaceutical industry, which has to come up with the bulk of the money anyway, would do better if firms were able to work freely with any genes and focused on patenting drugs instead. However, gene patent ownership is so important a part of biotech companies' stock market valuation that to threaten the concept would cause a market upheaval.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/genes/article/0,2763,3 97 385,00.html

  20. DMCA violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Doesn't decoding the human genome violate the DMCA anyway?

    I mean: god obviously made it very hard to read the code (and didn't post the sources anywhere). So, surely, circumventing His copy protection must be illegal?

  21. Ummm .... well.... by ThundaGaiden · · Score: 2, Funny

    Patents on the human genome , doesn't this affect
    us all in a very personal way ?

    Biotech : "Excuse me sir , we have a problem"
    Person : "Yes , exactly what is that"
    Biotech : "You need to give us $100,000 for a
    license"
    Person : "Or what ? "
    Biotech : "Or we are going to remove the part of"
    "Your genome that lets you're body
    Process food"
    Person : "I don't have $100,000"

    One week later

    Person : "Gurgle gurgle gurgle" and promptly dies

  22. Re:Fighting software patents by boaworm · · Score: 2, Informative
    About right. On the DNA strand (2 single stranded rows of nucleotides) there are always an AT and CG relation. (A = adenine, T = thymine, C = cytosine, G = guanine)

    There is actually a 5th character used, U (uracil). It exists in mRNA (messenger RNA, represents DNA code when transported from the cell core to the ribosome). T is replaced by U.


    It seems like the author of the article confused nucleotides (A,C,T,G) with Amino acids (22 of them).


    with streams of As, Ts, Gs, and Cs, letters that represent the four amino acids that make up the DNA fragments that relate to the kinases.


    Amino acids consist of 3 nucleotides, so a series of nucleotides convert into N/3 amino acids. As an example, the nucleotide sequence "GCA" transforms into the amino acid alanine (A) and so forth.

    --
    Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
    Aristotele
  23. So... by Craig+Maloney · · Score: 2, Funny

    So, did God finally come down hard on the USPTO and yell "Prior Art!"?

  24. They forgot to mention.... by botik32 · · Score: 4, Informative
    That it was an open-source project that helped the human genome enter the public domain. See interview with Jim Kent:

    Stewart: You were essentially competing with Celera Genomics in a race to assemble the genome, and they had procured what was reportedly the most powerful civilian computer in history for their effort. What tools did you use to beat them to the result?

    Kent: 100 800 MhZ Pentium processors with 256 Mb RAM each, running Linux, the gcc compiler, the vim editor, a whiteboard, and occasional ice packs for the wrists.

  25. Breast cancer gene by octalgirl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hope this invalidates that patent on the breast cancer gene, discussed here.

    It is just stunning to me that could be issued in the first place. And the company was actually using their patent to try and stop others from treating the gene, because it was their gene? Human body parts of any kind should not be patented. This may sound sexist, but I think if that was a testicle gene the patent never would have been issued. (sort of like the viagra vs birth control debacle)

  26. Loophole by dissy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One loophole is really simple.

    Patents are for inventions. No court can really argue this.

    So say I discover a gene, and later find a way to cure something by using that gene.

    I can simply go ahead and do so, as long as no other companys cure the same problem with the same gene.
    If all they have done is patent the gene, I am free to ignore that.

    So say they did patent the gene I use, and attempt to sue me.
    I can be nice and explain to them the error of their way, but legally im not required to even respond directly to them.

    So they try to sue me.

    All I would need to do in a court of law is have them show their invention using the gene to the court. This is how two partys would prove that my invention is not the same (or if it is.)

    They will have no such invention.
    (Like i said, if they do, they have a valid process to patent, and life goes on.)

    So at this point its safe to conclude that my invention (curing something by using this gene) does not at all match anything they are doing.

    No patent infringement issue at all.

    A judge could not claim a gene itself is patentable. At that point any living person is prior art which will invalidate the patent fully.

  27. Any other biochemists out there cringe at this? by Milo+Fungus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the Article:

    "In the 57-page patent, 31 pages are filled with streams of As, Ts, Gs, and Cs, letters that represent the four amino acids that make up the DNA fragments that relate to the kinases." [emphasis added]

    OUCH! Amino acids do not make up the genetic code! ATGC are nucleotides . Amino acids are the building blocks of protein. The amino acid sequence of proteins is encoded in the sequence of nucleotides in nucleic acid.

    I realize that this post could be considered a nitpick, but to me it's not. It's like a software designer reading somewhere that the source code for an application was "written in the XML programming language." Doesn't that make your gut clamp up? Or what about, "Internet Explorer is my operating system?"