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A researcher conducts a gene therapy experiment at an NIH lab
The
Worth of the Gene
So how much is this worth, anyway? That's the billion-dollar
question, and nobody's taking any chances. In the race to cash in
on the human genome, companies have begun filing patent applications
as fast as new genes are discovered and sometimes faster. The
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has issued more than 1,800 patents
on full gene sequences. Most of these have been for plants, but the
past few years have seen a tremendous increase in applications for
human gene patents. And now that the Patent Office allows patents
on the gene fragments known as Expressed Sequence Tags or EST's that
give a broad but often incomplete map of a particular gene, researchers
all over the world are rushing to patent offices before they have
any idea of what the sequence they've mapped actually does.
The real money, at least for now, seems to be in bioinfomatics companies
like Millennium Pharmaceuticals that use massive databases to find
genes and determine the functions of their proteins more quickly
and accurately than conventional methods.
But who should own the gene? The scientist who discovered it? The
company who financed the research? Or all of mankind? Can you really
patent a part of the human body? Ultimately, who (if anyone) rakes
in those billion-dollar rewards will probably be decided in the
courts, rather than Wall Street.
from
TIME and FORTUNE
What
Will Replace the Tech Economy?
Get ready for bioeconomy, which will supplant our infotech economy.
Bioec will give new meaning to the smell of money
MAY 29, 2000
Hatching
a DNA Giant
From
FORTUNE: It used to take years to find a single gene. Now Millennium
Pharmaceuticals, a leader in the booming field of genomics, is identifying
disease-associated genes--and targets for new drugs--by the hundreds.
MAY 24, 1999
Engineering
the Future of Food
From FORTUNE: A revolutionary blurring of foods and drugs is transforming
the industries that make them and promising to help us age gracefully.
SEPTEMBER 28, 1998
Why Biotech Stocks Are Cheap
MAY 18, 1998
Bearish
On Biotech
Laymen should stay away lest they get fleeced.
MARCH 10, 1997
The
Real Biotech Revolution
From FORTUNE: Biotech's real power lies in reading the book of life,
not blindly copying it.
MARCH 31, 1997
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