Wheat cultivar 01102476
Pith reviewed 2026-05-28 07:31 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The patent asserts a wheat plant of cultivar 01102476 whose seeds are preserved under NCMA accession 202312008.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A plant of wheat cultivar 01102476 exists and is represented by the seed sample deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202312008.
What carries the argument
Seed deposit under a named accession number that stands in for the living cultivar.
If this is right
- The named cultivar can be referenced in future breeding, licensing, or infringement actions by its accession number.
- Any plant grown from the deposited seed inherits the legal status asserted in the filing.
- Subsequent varieties derived from 01102476 can be distinguished by reference to this baseline deposit.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The filing treats the accession number as sufficient evidence of novelty without supplying comparative data in the visible text.
- If the deposit remains viable, researchers could request samples to test performance against other wheat lines under controlled conditions.
Load-bearing premise
The deposited seeds produce plants that are distinct, uniform, and stable enough to qualify as a protectable cultivar.
What would settle it
Growth tests showing that plants grown from the deposited seeds fail to match the morphological or agronomic description required for the cultivar.
read the original abstract
1 . A plant of wheat cultivar 01102476, wherein a sample of seed of said cultivar has been deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202312008.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript consists solely of one legal claim: a plant of wheat cultivar 01102476 whose seed has been deposited under NCMA Accession No. 202312008.
Significance. The document asserts a plant-variety right rather than reporting empirical, genetic, or agronomic results. No data on distinctness, uniformity, stability, yield, disease resistance, or molecular markers are supplied, so the work does not advance scientific understanding of wheat genetics or breeding.
major comments (1)
- The sole claim (the only numbered paragraph) rests on the legal validity of the NCMA deposit but supplies none of the DUS evidence, pedigree, or marker data normally required to substantiate a new cultivar. This absence renders the central assertion unevaluable from the text itself.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the comments. The submission is a U.S. patent claim (not a scientific manuscript) whose sole purpose is to establish public notice of the deposited cultivar under 35 U.S.C. § 112. Scientific data such as DUS trials or marker profiles are neither required nor appropriate in the claim text itself; they reside in the deposit and the patent-examination record.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The sole claim (the only numbered paragraph) rests on the legal validity of the NCMA deposit but supplies none of the DUS evidence, pedigree, or marker data normally required to substantiate a new cultivar. This absence renders the central assertion unevaluable from the text itself.
Authors: The document is a single independent claim in a utility patent application. Patent claims are legal instruments; they do not contain experimental data. Distinctness, uniformity, stability, and enablement are satisfied by the seed deposit under 37 C.F.R. § 1.801–1.809 together with the cultivar description filed with the USPTO. No revision to the claim language is possible or necessary. revision: no
Circularity Check
No circularity: legal deposit claim only
full rationale
The document consists solely of a single legal claim that identifies the cultivar by reference to a deposited seed sample (NCMA Accession No. 202312008). No equations, parameters, predictions, derivations, or self-citations appear; therefore no step can reduce to its own inputs by construction. The circularity axis is inapplicable.
discussion (0)
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