Read Experiment Eleven Online

Authors: Peter Pringle

Experiment Eleven (18 page)

Back then, he licensed his adrenaline invention to America's first drug manufacturer, Parke, Davis & Co. of Detroit. The company started producing the drug, which was written up in the media as one of the new so-called blockbuster medicines. It helped control excessive bleeding in surgery and was also used in cardiology, obstetrics, and the treatment of asthma and other allergies. (It is still used today to relieve breathing difficulties.) As the medical uses became apparent, Takamine obtained five separate new patents, including ones in Britain and Japan.

Eight years later, another drug company, H. K. Mulford, a maker of aphrodisiacs and talcum powder and a minor enterprise compared with Parke, Davis, challenged the patent mainly on “priority” grounds. Mulford considered that it had been the first to isolate adrenaline from its natural state.

A furious legal battle ensued, with both sides engaging in several days of technical debate. The adrenaline case was heard in New York by Judge Learned Hand, a jurist with a reputation for legal craftsmanship and clarity, who was then on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District. Judge Hand relished the complexity of the case.

When Takamine had originally applied for a patent, the examiner had
rejected his claim because he believed that no product patent was possible if the discovery was merely separated from its natural surroundings and remained unchanged. To get around this objection, Takamine changed the chemical nature of the extracted adrenaline, turning it from a salt, which is the form naturally found in the suprarenal gland, into a base.

The secretion from the adrenal glands in situ was clearly a product of nature, but Judge Hand steered the court toward a separate and fundamental question: whether a patent could be issued on a product of the adrenal glands that was purified for therapeutic use.

Judge Hand declared that what Takamine had created was an important distinction; the base was an original production of Takamine's. He was also the first to make the drug available for any use by removing it from the gland tissue in which it was found. Judge Hand wrote that it became “for every practical purpose a new thing commercially and therapeutically. That was
good ground for a patent
.”

Although he had not been asked specifically about adrenaline as a product of nature, Judge Hand became well known for his ruling that purified products of nature can be patented. Waksman did not refer to his knowledge of Takamine's patent, but it must have boosted his confidence when he came to argue the patent application for his first antibiotic, actinomycin, in 1940. The Patent Office ruled immediately that the applicants (Waksman and Boyd Woodruff) had failed “to adequately distinguish” between actinomycin and products found in nature. The patent examiner wrote, “It is expected that actinomyces will generate (in natural cultural medium) antibiotics. Products of nature are ‘old' and the fact of their existence
cannot be claimed per se
.”

Waksman was ready with a counterargument. Antibiotics are only produced in artificial nutrients on the laboratory bench, he asserted. In an amendment to the actinomycin application, he argued, “It is not uncommon for organisms, when cultivated in artificial media, to produce substances which are
not
[emphasis added] produced in any detectable amounts by the organism as it occurs in nature.”

Any “
lingering doubt
,” he added, in legal language that clearly came from Merck's lawyers, “should be resolved in the applicants' favor.” Backing the application, Merck lawyers argued that the Patent Office objection was “unsupported either by the cited art or by affidavit as to facts within
the knowledge of the Examiner.” The application was granted. And so was the one for Waksman's second antibiotic, streptothricin, after Waksman made similar arguments.

In considering the application for streptomycin, the Patent Office raised the same “product of nature” question yet again. Waksman, with two victories behind him, was more confident this time. In a much bolder assertion, he declared, “Various attempts made in our laboratory to isolate it or demonstrate its presence in the soil
failed to detect it
. This antibiotic is not a product of nature, but produced by particular strains of
A. griseus
only in cultures of given composition and under given conditions of culture as outlined in the patent application.”

Waksman proposed his negative test—“We did not find any streptomycin in the soil”—as proof that antibiotics were not found in nature. He thereby shifted the burden of proof onto the Patent Office, which promptly surrendered. The examiner, apparently unwilling to challenge Waksman's prestige and honors in the subject, granted the patent.

BUT THE EXAMINER
would not have had to look far for evidence to challenge Waksman's assertion—in fact, no further than Waksman's own book on microbe wars, first published in 1945 and reprinted in 1947.

In a passage discussing the destruction of disease bacteria in the soil by actinomycetes, Waksman wrote, “The fact that
many pathogens can grow
steadily in sterilized soil but do not survive in normal soil tends to add weight to the theory of the destructive effect upon pathogens of the microbiological population in normal soil.” In other words, disease bacteria in natural soil seem to be destroyed by other bacteria, by fungi or actinomycetes that produce antibiotics.

The Patent Office examiner could also have found evidence challenging Waksman in the work of other researchers. The key phrase in Waksman's presentation to the Patent Office was “in our laboratory.” Waksman knew perfectly well that others had reported antibiotics in nature—in the soil. Prime among them were the Russian researchers whose work he also cited in his 1945 book.

In 1937, one Russian researcher reported that “the antagonistic effects of actinomycetes were manifested not only in artificial media, but
also in
soil
[emphasis added], the interrelations here being much more complex.” The antagonistic action was more intense in light (podzol) soils and was greatly reduced in heavy black earth, or chernozem soils—one of the factors apparently being the high content of organic matter in the chernozem. According to the Russian research, antibiotics were produced in nature, but at different rates, depending on the environment. To say that they were not produced in the soil was incorrect.

Many of Waksman's Western colleagues simply disagreed with him, but then, they were not applying for patents. In the coming years, Waksman was to hold fast to his assertion and castigate those who suggested that antibiotics were produced in the soil, albeit in minuscule quantities. At other times, Waksman's reply to his colleagues on this matter sometimes seemed crafted for the moment. “At times, when Waksman was giving a talk, he would say that antibiotics are weapons in the struggle for existence among microorganisms.
At other times
he would say antibiotics only exist when you grow microorganisms in a man-made medium,” recalled one of Waksman's graduates.

In dropping its objection to the “product of nature” rule, the Patent Office also allowed a so-called broad patent on the product itself, streptomycin. The patent covered the chemical compound streptomycin, however it was made—by
A. griseus
or another microbe or synthetically in the laboratory. The Rutgers lawyers congratulated themselves. Russell Watson, the lawyer for the Rutgers Foundation, bragged about it to one company seeking a license to make streptomycin from
A. griseus
: “We are
particularly pleased
with Claim No. 13 which, as you will observe, is a product patent expressed by the single word ‘streptomycin.'” And the foundation's patent lawyer told Watson the product claim would “
prevent the importation
into this country of streptomycin manufactured abroad.”

In a separate application by Merck researchers, argued by the company's lawyers, the Patent Office granted a patent for the method used by Merck's chemists to extract and purify the drug. In 1945, Merck researchers had claimed a patent on “complex salts of streptomycin” and the process for preparing the drug. Merck lawyers argued that this method was patentable because the therapeutic benefits of the drug were unknown prior to its isolation, echoing Judge Learned Hand's ruling in the Takamine case. “
Thus, for the first time
,” a Merck lawyer asserted, “streptomycin is available in a form which not only has valuable therapeutic properties but also
can be produced, distributed, and administered in a therapeutic way.” This separate patent was also granted.

ON SEPTEMBER 30,
1948, Waksman received a royalty check for $44,474, bringing his total so far to $187,283. In October, he sent Schatz
another $500 check
, which he accepted “but only
as a loan
.” Waksman was delighted to hear from Schatz that things were going well at the Hopkins Marine Station, and offered another check before the end of the year. The check arrived a month later—with an assignment form for the patent for South America. Waksman asked Schatz to
treat the checks
as “outright payments” to help him obtain advanced training in microbiology.

Schatz signed the patent form, but this time politely returned the check, saying that his financial situation was now “quite satisfactory” and he therefore could not bring himself “to impose upon you any further.” He still had two hundred dollars from the first check, and his savings account was at eight hundred dollars. Vivian was still helping at the lab, earning about fifteen dollars a week. “We are living comfortably and are by no means stinting or denying ourselves.”

Schatz added, “To be perfectly honest with you, I simply would not know
what to do with the money
if I had it, and I sincerely hope that I shall never have to spend any time attempting to solve such a problem myself.” He and Vivian were neither smokers nor drinkers, and they did not go out much. They liked seeing their friends, music, reading, canoeing, and hiking. “We value most things that cannot be purchased with money.” He thanked Waksman for his “friendship, confidence, and encouragement ... things worth more than material aspects.”

What happened next would trigger a sudden and explosive break in their relationship.

Waksman replied immediately. He “regretted” that Schatz had returned the check, explaining that the Rutgers Foundation had given him “
a certain sum of money
” and he felt that Schatz should be compensated for assigning the streptomycin patents to the foundation. There would probably be two or three more assignments. He asked Schatz to reconsider his initial rejection of the check, as otherwise, he wrote, he would have to pay
his own income tax
on the money.

Schatz was shocked. Waksman wanted him to pay income tax on funds
that Waksman had been secretly receiving into his personal account from streptomycin royalties. But if the five hundred dollars was from streptomycin royalties, he was certainly entitled to it. So he decided to accept the check and argue about the tax matter later. “As to the check,” he wrote, “I will now be glad to accept it if you will be good enough to send it to me again.” He had not known the “source of the funds” and had not “wanted to be a ball and chain around your neck, nor to take funds that might be better used in your own Department at Rutgers.”

Waksman rewrote the check and asked Schatz again to make sure to report all three checks on his income tax. He also asked for Schatz's signature on two more patent assignments—for Canada and New Zealand. This time, he offered one hundred dollars for the New Zealand patent.

Now Schatz was totally confused. He had assumed the checks were a gift from Waksman, and the total sum, as a gift, was not taxable. Where the money was coming from was a mystery to him.

PART III • The Challenge

14 • The Letter

SCHATZ HAD ALWAYS BEEN EMBARRASSED THAT
he could not explain the money side of his discovery to his colleagues, like Doris Jones, or his family, especially Uncle Joe. He had planned to ask Waksman about it before he left for California, but there had been no time for a meeting. After Waksman had sent him the second and third checks, he had written the Rutgers Foundation, but he had never received a reply.

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