Appeal No. 2000-1779 Application No. 08/473,204 The rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 103 The examiner reasons (Answer67, page 4) that: The McNamara et al. publication, taken alone, clearly placed an isolated cDNA encoding a human GluR4 protein in the hands of an artisan of ordinary skill at the time of the instant invention. The isolation of that cDNA only requires an artisan to screen a cDNA library produced from human brain mRNA with a nucleic acid probe encoding rat GluR4 in the same manner that McNamara et al. employed to screen the human genomic library described therein. In the bridging paragraph of pages 4-5 of the Answer, the examiner states: To have incorporated that cDNA into an expression vector and host cell to obtain the expression and quantitative production of human GluR4 and to permit the characterization of that protein at the molecular level by employing those methods that were old and well known in the art would have been prima facie obvious in view of this [McNamara] reference. Further, the production of a membrane preparation containing such a protein from a host cell to permit the evaluation of the binding characteristics of a receptor protein was a practice that was also old and well known at the time that the instant invention was made. In the bridging paragraph of pages 5-6 of the Answer, the examiner relies upon Sommer ‘90 for the teaching that GluR1-A, -B, -C, and –D exist in one of two (flip and flop) sequence versions. Characterizing GluR4B as GluR-D the examiner concludes at page 6 of the Answer, that: Because McNamara disclosed that humans have a GluR-D gene, as well as the location of that gene and 17, 19 and 31 --. These three claims are the only claims pending and on appeal in this application. 67 Paper No. 17, mailed January 22, 1999. 90Page: Previous 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007