Patents granted to The University of Toledo
The invention disclosed in the following patents provides a method for
transforming of Gramineae with a vir+ A.
tumefaciens. A seedling is inoculated with the bacterium in an area of
rapid cell division, which gives rise to germ cell lines. By inoculating this
area, transformation of pollen is attained.
Specific Patent Information
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Patent Number
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Title, Independent Claims and Summary of Claims
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Assignee
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US
5187073
- Earliest priority - 30 June 1986
- Filed - 13 November 1989
- Granted - 16 February 1993
- Expected expiry - 15 February 2010
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Title - Process for transforming Gramineae and the products
thereof
| Claim 1
A method of producing transformed Gramineae, said method comprising:
A) making a wound in a graminaceous seedling with newly emerging radicle and
stem, said wound being made in an area of the seedling containing rapidly
dividing cells, wherein said area extends from the base of the scutellar node to
slightly beyond the coleoptile node; and B) inoculating the wound with
vir+ A. tumefaciens.
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The United States patent 5187073 claims
- the transformation of a seedling of a Gramineae plant with
vir+ A. tumefaciens in a wound located between the
scutellar node and the coleoptile node
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The University of Toledo
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US
6020539
- Earliest priority - 30 June 1986
- Filed - 27 June 1994
- Granted - February 1 2000
- Expected expiry - 15 February 2010
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Title - Process for transforming Gramineae and the products
thereof
Claim 1
A transformed pollen grain of a Gramineae produced by a plant grown from a
seedling infected with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens containing a
vector comprising genetically-engineered T-DNA.
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Claim 3
A transformed Gramineae plant derived from a seedling infected with vir+
Agrobacterium tumefaciens which contains a vector comprising
genetically-engineered T-DNA.
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Claim 6
A transformed Gramineae produced by making a wound in a graminaceous seedling
with newly emerged radicle and stem, the wound being made in an area of the
seedling containing rapidly dividing cells, wherein said area extends from the
base of the scutellar node to slightly beyond the coleoptile node; and
inoculating the wound with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
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Claim 17
A transformed Gramineae produced by making a wound in a graminaceous seedling
with newly emerged radicle and stem, the wound being made in an area of the
seedling containing rapidly dividing cells, wherein said area extends from the
base of the scutellar node to slightly beyond the coleoptile node; and
inoculating the wound with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens; the
transformed Gramineae containing a foreign gene which is an opine synthesis gene
that is a nopaline synthase gene or an octopine synthase gene.
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Claim 22
An Agrobacterium--mediated transformed Gramineae.
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Claim 25
A transformed Gramineae plant comprising a genetically-engineered T-DNA
further comprising a heterologous gene and a transcription unit in operable
order.
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This patent is a continuation of now abandoned US 08/016600, which is a
continuation of now granted US 5187073.
Although assignment of this patent is not stated in the records provided by
the International Patent Documentation Center (INPADOC) and USPTO PAIR, the
patent can be licensed through the University of Toledo
according to the information provided by the Office of Technology Licensing of
the university.
The claims of the United States patent US 6,020,539 embrace the subject
matter claimed in the United States patent US 5,187,073 and the Australian
patent AU 606 874 B2 granted to the University of Toledo. That is the
transformation of a Gramineae seedling in an area of high cellular division with
vir+ A. tumefaciens. Transformed pollen and plants derived from the
seedling inoculated with vir+ A. tumefaciens are also claimed.
United States patent US 6,020,539 further claims
This last, fairly broad claim does not restrict
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AU 606874 B2
- Earliest priority - 30 June 1986
- Filed - 30 June 1987
- Granted - 21 February 1991
- Expected expiry - 29 June 2007
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Title - Transformation of Gramineae and products thereof
| Claim 1
A method of producing transformed Gramineae, as hereinbefore defined,
comprising: A) making a wound in a seedling in an area of the seedling
containing rapidly dividing cells that give rise to germ line cells; and
B) inoculating the wound with vir+ A. tumefaciens.
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The Australian patent 606874 claims the transformation of a
seedling with vir+ A. tumefaciens as well, but it
does not specify the area where the inoculation occurs.
It claims
- wounding of the seedling in an area that gives rise to germ cell lines;
- transformed pollen derived from the transformed seedling having inserted
foreign DNA in its cells;
- transformed Gramineae plant derived from the seedling transformed with
A. tumefaciens having a vector with engineered DNA
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CA 1341455 A1
- Earliest priority - 30 June 1986
- Filed - 29 June 1987
- Granted - 27 April 2004
- Expected expiry - 26 April 2021
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Title - Process for transforming Gramineae and the products
thereof
| Claim 1
A method of producing transformed Gramineae comprising: A) making a
wound in a seedling in an area of the seedling containing rapidly dividing
cells; and B) inoculating the wound with vir+ A.
tumefaciens.
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Claim 10
A transformed pollen grain of a Gramineae.
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Claim 11
A transformed pollen grain of a Gramineae produced by a plant grown from a
seedling infected with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
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Claim 12
A transformed pollen grain of a Gramineae produced by a plant grown from a
seedling infected with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens which
contains a vector comprising genetically-engineered T-DNA.
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Claim 13
A transformed pollen grain of a Gramineae produced by a plant grown from a
seedling infected with vir+ Agrobacterium tumefaciens which
contains a vector comprising genetically-engineered T-DNA.
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This patent claims
- a method of Gramineae transformation by inoculating vir+
Agrobacterium tumefaciens to a seedling that is wounded where the cells are
rapidly dividing
- a transformed Gramineae pollen grain (this claim is broad due to the fact
that there is no limit on the method of transformation)
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| Remarks |
- A corresponding patent and its divisional patent has been granted in Japan
(JP 2693443 and JP 3234534 respectively).
- A continuation of now granted US 6020539 (US 2002-0002711 A1) has been
abandoned.
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Note: Patent information on this page was last updated on 14 February 2006.
The information contained in this page was believed to be correct at the
time it was collated. New patents and patent applications, altered
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