Appeal No. 2000-1779 Application No. 08/473,204 Accordingly, we remand the case to the examiner to first decide whether the amendment to claim 15 was properly entered, and to determine the scope of the claim. Thereafter, the examiner should determine the availability of Moriyoshi as prior art against the claim. The rejection of claims 1-11, 14 and 15 under 35 U.S.C. § 103: The examiner states (Answer, page 6) that an “artisan would have found the isolation of a cDNA encoding the human homologue of the rat NMDA receptor of Moriyoshi et.[]al. by employing the expression cloning method described therein but employing a cDNA library prepared from human forebrain mRNA in place of rat mRNA to have been prima facie obvious at the time of the instant invention.” The examiner further states (Answer, page 8) that: Because of the known similarities between rat NMDAR1 and rat GluR1 which were disclosed in the Moriyoshi et.[]al. publication and the known similarities between GluR1 and its human homologue as described in Figure 1 on page 7559 of the Puckett et.[]al. publication, an artisan would have reasonably expected a cDNA library which had been prepated [sic] from human brain mRNA to contain a cDNA encoding an NMDAR1 which is analogous both structurally and functionally to the rat NMDAR1 of Moriyoshi et al. In response appellants argue (Brief, page 17) that “one of ordinary skill might have postulated the existence of a similar human receptor. Until a human homolog actually were isolated, however, its existence and degree of similarity, both structural and functional, to the rat receptor could only have been surmised, not reasonably expected.” Appellants then point to a number of differences (Brief, page 25) between the human receptor and the rat receptor. The examiner responds, inter alia, by stating (Answer, page 11) “[t]here are literally hundreds of prior art publications which describe isolated cDNAs encoding 108Page: Previous 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007