Soybean cultivar 21290304
Pith reviewed 2026-05-17 00:01 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A soybean plant of cultivar 21290304 is defined by seed deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202410017.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The paper claims a plant of soybean cultivar 21290304 whose identity is fixed by the deposit of representative seed under NCMA Accession No. 202410017.
What carries the argument
The NCMA seed deposit that fixes the cultivar's identity and enables reproduction of the claimed line.
If this is right
- Commercial seed production and sale of cultivar 21290304 become possible under the patent grant.
- The deposit provides a stable starting point for crossing and selection programs that use this line as a parent.
- Other parties can obtain the seed for research once the deposit becomes publicly available.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The accession number supplies a permanent physical reference that later molecular or phenotypic studies can use to verify identity.
- If the cultivar shows consistent agronomic performance, it could enter official variety trials that compare yield and disease resistance across regions.
Load-bearing premise
The deposited seed and its progeny are uniform, distinct, and novel enough to meet statutory standards for plant protection.
What would settle it
Grow-out tests showing that plants raised from the deposited seed fail to match the uniformity or traits required for a single cultivar.
read the original abstract
1 . A plant of soybean cultivar 21290304, representative seed of said soybean cultivar having been deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202410017.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript asserts a single claim defining soybean cultivar 21290304 by the deposit of representative seed under NCMA Accession No. 202410017.
Significance. If legally valid, the deposit would support plant-variety protection, but the absence of any morphological, agronomic, or molecular characterization data limits any contribution to the scientific literature on soybean genetics or breeding.
major comments (1)
- Abstract, claim 1: the central assertion that the deposited seed constitutes a novel, distinct, and uniform cultivar is unsupported by any description of distinguishing traits, yield data, or comparative trials, rendering the claim unverifiable from the manuscript alone.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the review. This document is a U.S. patent application whose sole purpose is to secure plant-variety protection through seed deposit; it is not a scientific manuscript intended to advance soybean genetics literature.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Abstract, claim 1: the central assertion that the deposited seed constitutes a novel, distinct, and uniform cultivar is unsupported by any description of distinguishing traits, yield data, or comparative trials, rendering the claim unverifiable from the manuscript alone.
Authors: Under 35 U.S.C. § 112, enablement for a plant cultivar claim is satisfied by deposit of representative seed with an accepted depository (here NCMA Accession No. 202410017). The single claim is deliberately drafted by reference to that deposit—the accepted statutory format for such patents. Comparative agronomic or molecular data are not required elements of the claim language or the enabling disclosure. revision: no
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
This is a plant-patent claim whose sole load-bearing assertion is the legal existence of cultivar 21290304, established by an external seed deposit (NCMA Accession No. 202410017). No derivation, equation, prediction, fitted parameter, or self-citation chain is present; the filing therefore contains no step that can reduce to its own inputs by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption A deposited seed accession defines a distinct, uniform, and stable soybean cultivar eligible for patent protection.
discussion (0)
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