(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kate Haggman
kate.haggman@qut.edu.au
61-731-380-358
Queensland University of Technology
Who's patenting whose genome?
An international project has developed a free and open public resource that will bring much-needed transparency to the murky and contentious world of gene patenting.
In a paper from Cambia and Queensland University of Technology (QUT) published in this week's Nature Biotechnology journal, researchers revealed that overworked patent offices are struggling to keep up with the rapid explosion in information and technology that genetic sequences represent.
"Apparently, many patent offices have no way of tracking genetic sequences disclosed in patents and currently do not provide them in machine-searchable format," said principal author Professor Osmat Jefferson, a QUT academic who leads an international team analysing biological patents for the open-access web resource, The Lens.
"This likely means patents are being granted for genes that are not 'newly discovered' at all, because the patent offices have no way of really knowing."
Professor Jefferson said patenting the genes and proteins of humans and other living things had fallen under intense scrutiny since the US Supreme Court ruled in June this year that naturally occurring genetic material could not be patented.
"Gene patenting is an area where almost everyone has an opinion - passions run high but until now the evidence has been lacking," Professor Jefferson said.
"What is happening? Who's doing the patenting? Why are they doing it? How much are they doing it? What rights are being granted? And how much is our society benefiting from these biological patent teachings?
"No one really knows because the whole system is opaque."
The Cambia/QUT team found that while major patent offices claimed to use sophisticated search tools and databases to access patent-disclosed sequences, those search mechanisms are not generally available to the public and may not be accessible to the dozens of patent offices in jurisdictions with limited budgets or emerging intellectual property protection.
The study also painstakingly classified the supposed 'claims' of more than two thousand US patents and found the majority did not actually claim the gene sequence itself, but rather its use for particular purposes.
"A patent is a government grant of a limited exclusive right to try to stop others' use of an invention," Professor Jefferson said.
"When that invention is a gene or protein sequence present in a living organism, it raises serious social questions that deserve serious consideration, especially when that sequence is used for an important genetic test or diagnostic."
Cambia's open sourced PatSeq toolkit, which forms part of its global web resource The Lens, provides the first open public insight into this contentious practice, using sequences extracted from millions of global patent documents, coupled with cutting edge web-based software.
Launched at a gathering in Australia this week, The Lens' PatSeq database already holds more than 120 million DNA sequences and 10 million protein sequences drawn from patent documents.
The PatSeq toolkit allows anyone to explore, at no cost, who has sought patents over genes and proteins in any organism, and includes:
a graphical tool to visualise the scope of patents overlaying the human genome
an analysing tool which allows detailed findings to the finest level to be correlated with the patent document
a search tool that allows anyone with a gene or protein sequence to find matches in the PatSeq database.
"Perhaps the toolkit's most important feature is that all findings can be embedded and shared with anyone, anywhere at no cost, allowing researchers, policy makers and concerned citizens to explore the evidence underlying this practice," Professor Jefferson said.
"The public – and indeed enterprise and policy makers – need to know the answers if we're to have a transparent, fair and economically productive society."
###
The Lens is a public resource run by Cambia, one of the world's leading NGOs, in collaboration with QUT.
It is funded by grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Lemelson Foundation and QUT.
Media contact: Kate Haggman, QUT Media, kate.haggman@qut.edu.au, +61 7 3138 0358, after hours +61 407 585 901
Who's patenting whose genome?
2013-12-07
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study reveals gene expression changes with meditation
2013-12-07
Study reveals gene expression changes with meditation
MADISON - With evidence growing that meditation can have beneficial health effects, scientists have sought to understand how these practices physically affect the body.
A new study by researchers in Wisconsin, ...
An important discovery of marine fossils in the upper part of the Permian Linxi Formation, China
2013-12-07
An important discovery of marine fossils in the upper part of the Permian Linxi Formation, China
In a recent study, large numbers of bryozoan and other typical marine fossils were discovered for the first time in the thick limestone layers and lenses of the upper part ...
Propagated sensation along the meridian exists objectively
2013-12-06
Propagated sensation along the meridian exists objectively
However, as the propagated sensation along the meridian is a subjective feeling, there is no direct evidence for its presence. According to a study published in the Neural Regeneration Research (Vol. 8, No. ...
Aging process accompanied by decreased hippocampal synaptophysin
2013-12-06
Aging process accompanied by decreased hippocampal synaptophysin
Caveolin-1 may be a new target for interfering with age-dependent decline in synaptic plasticity. To explore the relationship between synaptic plasticity in the aging process and changes in learning ...
Progesterone changes may cause cognitive impairment of Alzheimer's disease patients
2013-12-06
Progesterone changes may cause cognitive impairment of Alzheimer's disease patients
Steroid hormones and their metabolites within the central nervous system are commonly defined as neuroactive steroids or neurosteroids. Although neuroactive steroids have been shown ...
A*STAR scientists discover novel hormone essential for heart development
2013-12-06
A*STAR scientists discover novel hormone essential for heart development
This unusual discovery could aid cardiac repair and provide new therapies to common heart diseases and hypertension
1. Scientists at A*STAR's ...
Quantum effects help cells capture light, but the details are obscure
2013-12-06
Quantum effects help cells capture light, but the details are obscure
Ultrashort laser pulses reveal that 'coherence' plays a subtle role in energy transfers
Sophisticated recent experiments with ultrashort laser pulses support the idea ...
Penn study delivers protein across blood-brain barrier to degrade Alzheimer's plaques
2013-12-06
Penn study delivers protein across blood-brain barrier to degrade Alzheimer's plaques
The body is structured to ensure that any invading organisms have a tough time reaching the brain, an organ obviously critical to survival. Known as the blood-brain ...
The heat is on...or off
2013-12-06
The heat is on...or off
Having the sense to cut office energy bills
Office buildings have an enormous carbon footprint, but often energy is being wasted maintaining empty rooms and spaces at a comfortable temperature. Research to be published in the International Journal of ...
Promising results for Swedish cancer drug candidate
2013-12-06
Promising results for Swedish cancer drug candidate
A new study conducted by scientists from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at Harvard Medical School and Karolinska Institutet in Sweden presents very promising results for the treatment of the cancer form multiple ...