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Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize a Human Gene.


Invisible Frontiers: The Race to Synthesize a Human Gene. Stephen S. Hall. Atlantic Monthly Press, $19.95. Every year authorities make predictions that turn out to be wrong, forecasting shortages of some commodity--oil, hospital beds, American-born field goal kickers--that correct themselves. People forget about the prediction, the experts move on to some new crisis, and nothing much comes of it.

In one instance, however, there were lasting and remarkable consequences from a mistaken forecast made by a consensus of experts in the mid-1970s: the world's diabetic population, they said, would soon face a shortage of insulin. The prediction was so dramatic it spawned an entire industry--biotechnology. Today, biotech companies employ thousands of people for work that has nothing to do with insulin--making drugs for heart attack victims and growth hormones and performing AIDS research. Early investors in these businesses have become rich and biotech has replaced computers as the glamour industry of Wall Street. This all came about because the experts were wrong about insulin.

Stephen Hall, a freelance science writer, describes in this fine book how a few mistakes, a lot of fear, and plenty of capital produced America's gene-splicing industry. He begins with the pancreases of slaughtered cows and pigs from which insulin is produced. With Americans in the 1970s consuming less red meat, the supply of car-casses appeared to be diminishing, just as an aging U.S. population was beginning to produce more insulin-dependent diabetics. The perceived shortage triggered a race to mass-produce human insulin human insulin
n.
A protein that has the normal structure of insulin produced by the human pancreas but that is prepared by recombinant DNA techniques and by semisynthetic processes.
 by synthesizing a human insulin gene.

The bureaucratic mishap that started the race probably stemmed from an official who prepared projections for the Food and Drug Administration, who based his data on a mistake in an Eli Lilly Eli Lilly can refer to:
  • Eli Lilly and Company, a global pharmaceutical company
  • Colonel Eli Lilly (1839-1898), founder of Eli Lilly and Company
  • Eli Lilly (industrialist) (1885-1977), former president of Eli Lilly and Company
 training brochure that confused kilograms with pounds. "The whole thing was rubbish. There never was a shortage of pig pancreases, and there never will be," a pharmaceutical executive tells Hall. The synthesized insulin, it turned out, had neither economic nor significant medical advantages over the pig variety.

Nevertheless, the insulin scare attracted a formidable array of scientific talent. They were drawn by the chance to do what they called "Big Guy Science"--to tackle the handful of problems whose solutions held promise of a Nobel Prize Nobel Prize, award given for outstanding achievement in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, peace, or literature. The awards were established by the will of Alfred Nobel, who left a fund to provide annual prizes in the five areas listed above. . A few of them were also drawn by the opportunities it held for making them rich. The race became bicoastal bi·coas·tal  
adj.
1. Relating to both the east and west coasts of the United States, as:
a. Traveling frequently between coasts as part of a business or living arrangement:
. In San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , a University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States).  scientist named Herbert Boyer Herbert W. Boyer (b. 1936) is a recipient of the 1990 National Medal of Science, and co-recipient of the 1996 Lemelson-MIT Prize and a co-founder of Genentech.

Boyer received his bachelor's degree in biology and chemistry from Saint Vincent College in the Pittsburgh suburb
 teamed up with a 28-year-old venture capitalist Venture Capitalist

An investor who provides capital to either start-up ventures or support small companies who wish to expand but do not have access to public funding.

Notes:
Venture capitalists usually expect higher returns for the additional risks taken.
, Robert Swanson, who had become fascinated by DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 after reading The Double Helix double helix
n.
The coiled structure of a double-stranded DNA molecule in which strands linked by hydrogen bonds form a spiral configuration. Also called DNA helix, Watson-Crick helix.
, James Watson's account of research that led to his discovery, with Francis Crick, of the structure of DNA in 1953. Boyer and Swanson each put up $500 to start a company that they considered calling Herb-Bob before settling on Genetech. They competed against a team of scientists at the University of California, and a Harvard team led by Walter Gilbert, a former physicist who switched to molecular chemistry at the urging of Watson himself. The rivalry between the three teams soon became the dominating influence on their work. The competition led to some superhuman su·per·hu·man  
adj.
1. Above or beyond the human; preternatural or supernatural.

2. Beyond ordinary or normal human ability, power, or experience: "soldiers driven mad by superhuman misery" 
 efforts and one case of suspected laboratory sabotage.

The press, meanwhile, fell in love with the biotech story. Hall credits the Genetech team, eventual winners of the race, with adroit use of press coverage to keep the company's anxious investors on board. After Genetech holds a press conference to announce synthesis of the insulin gene, the story is front-page news everywhere. "Hardly anyone in the press, however, bothered to ask a rather fundamental question," Hall writes. "Did Genetech's insulin actually work? Among all the reporters who described the work, only a handful of publications--among them Nature, Medical World News, and the Los Angeles Times--raised this important point. And the answer was: they didn't know." Still, their technological breakthroughs found ready application in the burgeoning gene-splicing industry.

Hall occasionally lapses into purple prose in his descriptions of the scientists, and his scene-switching among the three teams sometimes leave the reader bewildered. But his story of the collision of "Big Guy Science," big business, and public policy makes a worthy companion piece to The Double Helix. The haphazard nature of how scientific progress is made in America is summed up when Walter Gilbert wins the 1980 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. He finds out from a reporter who calls looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a quote; the official notification from Stockholm gets lost in transit and doesn't arrive until weeks later.
COPYRIGHT 1988 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1988, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Graulich, David
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Apr 1, 1988
Words:742
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