Plants and seeds of hybrid corn variety CH010559
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 14:02 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A hybrid corn variety called CH010559 is produced by crossing two specific deposited inbred lines, CV761500 and CV554903.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A seed of hybrid corn variety CH010559 is obtained by crossing a first plant of variety CV761500 with a second plant of variety CV554903, with representative seeds of the two parent varieties deposited under NCMA Accession Nos. 202005026 and 202206030 respectively.
What carries the argument
The controlled cross between the two named inbred parent lines that generates the uniform hybrid seed.
If this is right
- Seed of CH010559 can be produced reliably by repeating the same parental cross each generation.
- The hybrid meets the uniformity and stability requirements needed for plant variety protection.
- Farmers or seed companies can obtain the variety only through authorized channels that maintain the deposited parent lines.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Other breeders could use the same deposited lines to recreate an equivalent hybrid if the patent expires or if licensing terms allow.
- The deposition numbers provide a permanent physical reference that courts or regulators could use to verify future seed lots.
Load-bearing premise
The two parent lines are genetically stable and distinct enough that their cross always produces the same uniform hybrid.
What would settle it
Grow-out tests showing that seed produced from the stated cross does not consistently match the morphological or agronomic description of CH010559.
read the original abstract
1 . A seed of hybrid corn variety CH010559, produced by crossing a first plant of variety CV761500 with a second plant of variety CV554903, wherein representative seeds of said varieties CV761500 and CV554903 are deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202005026 and NCMA Accession No. 202206030, respectively.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims a new hybrid corn variety CH010559 obtained by crossing inbred parent lines CV761500 and CV554903, with representative seeds deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202005026 and NCMA Accession No. 202206030, respectively. The sole asserted claim is the legal definition of the hybrid via this parentage and the existence of the deposited accessions.
Significance. If the deposits and parentage are verified, the work would support plant-variety protection for this specific hybrid. However, the document supplies no agronomic, genetic, or statistical data on uniformity, stability, or performance, limiting its value as a scientific contribution to plant breeding or genetics.
major comments (1)
- [Claim 1] Claim 1 (and the abstract): the central assertion that the cross produces a distinct, uniform, and reproducible hybrid variety rests entirely on the legal status of the two deposited accessions; no supporting measurements of genetic identity, morphological uniformity, or yield stability are provided to substantiate the claim.
minor comments (1)
- The manuscript is formatted as a patent filing rather than a research article; standard journal sections (methods, results, discussion) are absent.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for reviewing the document. This submission is a U.S. patent application for plant-variety protection under 35 U.S.C. § 161, not a scientific research article. Our response addresses the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Claim 1 (and the abstract): the central assertion that the cross produces a distinct, uniform, and reproducible hybrid variety rests entirely on the legal status of the two deposited accessions; no supporting measurements of genetic identity, morphological uniformity, or yield stability are provided to substantiate the claim.
Authors: We agree that the patent claim defines the hybrid solely by its parentage and the deposited accessions. Under U.S. patent law for plant patents, enablement and distinctness are satisfied by a deposit of representative seed together with a written description of the breeding process; quantitative agronomic or molecular data are not required elements of the claim itself. Such data, when generated, typically appear in separate PVP applications, variety registration documents, or commercial literature rather than in the patent specification. revision: no
Circularity Check
No circularity: legal definition via deposited accessions
full rationale
The document is a plant-variety patent whose sole load-bearing claim defines the hybrid by explicit parentage (CV761500 × CV554903) together with public seed deposits under named NCMA accession numbers. No equations, fitted parameters, predictions, derivations, or self-citations appear; the claim is therefore a direct legal stipulation rather than a result obtained from any internal chain that could reduce to its own inputs.
discussion (0)
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