The genome defense Inside the epic legal battle to determine who owns your DNA

Jorge L. Contreras

Book - 2021

"The gripping true story of a Supreme Court civil rights battle to prevent biotech companies from owning the very thing that makes us who we are-our DNA"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

346.730486/Contreras
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 346.730486/Contreras Checked In
Subjects
Published
Chapel Hill, North Carolina : Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Jorge L. Contreras (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiv, 416 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781616209681
  • Preface
  • Part I. Building The Case
  • Chapter 1. Who Can We Sue?
  • Chapter 2. The World in the Helix
  • Chapter 3. The Gene Queen
  • Chapter 4. Mr. Lincoln's Boat
  • Chapter 5. The ACLU Way
  • Chapter 6. Product of Nature
  • Chapter 7. On the Hill
  • Chapter 8. Speaking of Patents
  • Chapter 9. The Power of Pink
  • Chapter 10. We've Got You Covered
  • Chapter 11. BART
  • Chapter 12. Patents and Plaintiffs
  • Chapter 13. Pulling the Trigger
  • Part II. Litigation
  • Chapter 14. The Big Guns
  • Chapter 15. SDNY
  • Chapter 16. Chicken and Egg
  • Chapter 17. Were from the Government
  • Chapter 18. Splitting the Baby
  • Chapter 19. The Patent Court
  • Chapter 20. Magic Microscope
  • Chapter 21. Last Man Standing
  • Part III. Highest Court in the Land
  • Chapter 22. Déjà Vu All Over Again
  • Chapter 23. Air Force 1
  • Chapter 24. With Friends like These
  • Chapter 25. Oyez, Oyez, Oyez!
  • Chapter 26. 9-0
  • Chapter 27. Aftermath
  • Appendix: The (Legal) Meaning of Myriad
  • Principal Characters
  • A Note about Sources
  • Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In his eye-opening debut, law professor Contreras vividly tells the inside story of AMP v. Myriad, the 2013 Supreme Court case that took on the question "Are human genes patentable?" The case marked the ACLU's first-ever patent case, an unlikely battle for the famed civil rights organization, and an unlikelier victory spurred by the long-standing but controversial patenting of human genes. Contreras describes how the ACLU mobilized a remarkable team and a powerful public campaign to bring the issue before the Supreme Court, challenging Myriad Genetics' patent claims against its BRACAnalysis test (which was used to detect mutations linked to breast and ovarian cancer). Examining both sides of the legal battle, the author carefully explains the pertinent scientific as well as legal points: whether or not an isolated human gene is patentable, he explains, "hinges on whether it is more accurately described as a product of nature (not patentable) or a man-made substance (patentable)." Contreras brings the large cast of case-participants to life with vivid prose, and the exciting final spectacle before the Supreme Court is heart-pumping--of the packed courtroom, Contreras writes, "at precisely ten, a high-pitched chime sounded and the room quickly became quiet." The result is a thorough page-turner. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A superb lesson on patents in general and the grotesque American patent system in particular. Everyone agrees that patents are essential to allow inventors to profit from their inventions, but what is "patentable" remains a subject of fierce debate, notes Contreras, who teaches intellectual property, science policy, and the law and ethics of genetics at the University of Utah. New machines, methods, or materials qualify, but naturally occurring substances don't. As such, a botanist who discovers a previously unknown mushroom can't patent it because he only found it; he didn't invent it. Yet, somehow, genes qualify. During the 1970s and '80s, genetic engineering exploded when courts began approving patents for genetically modified organisms, and entrepreneurs pushed the envelope by asking for and receiving patents on sequences of human DNA. "By late 1996," writes Contreras, "the journal Nature reported that more than 350 new gene patent applications had been filed. Genes that could help to diagnose predispositions to more and more health conditions." There was no shortage of religious and scientific argument in opposition, but gene patents were legal, and changing a law requires legal arguments. Although it had never litigated a patent case, the ACLU decided in 2009 to take action and chose a target to maximize public interest. It focused on a woman who had a gene that put her at increased risk of developing breast or ovarian cancer, the test for which was in the hands of a company that owned the patent, monopolized the diagnostic test, and set a high price that insurance often did not cover. Having set the scene, Contreras assembles a large cast of lawyers, judges, activists, scientists, and patients and engagingly describes four years of tortuous legal action that saw victory in federal court, reversal on appeal, and a final triumph in the Supreme Court. A detailed account of patent law that, against all odds, turns out to be fascinating. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.