"It doesn't look like a very complicated technology." Nathan is a senior researcher. If it weren't for Dalbecco's retention, he might have gone to a university as a professor.

In academic terms, Nathan has always been known for his outspokenness. Even though Dalbecco gave the order, he still said: "Using fluorescent labels instead of isotope labels sounds good. It will make the experimental results more intuitive, but it is too much trouble. Identified and monitored by detectors, such detectors do not currently exist."

Dalbek said: "We can make such a detector."

"Yep?"

"Nathan, the total funding we hope to apply for the Human Genome Project is $3 billion, and we will develop a detector if the fluorescent label is meaningful."

"Let the four bases emit four colors of light. Of course, this is definitely meaningful. If the detector works well, it can save a lot of manpower. The premise is that we don't need to spend too much money to develop the detector. ."

Dalbecco sighed and said, "Nathan, you are a genius in the laboratory, but you always don't have enough understanding of the overall situation of the project. When we make a human genetic map, isn't it to mark the positional relationship of the four bases in the end? We need to measure 3 billion bases, so as long as the fluorescent labeling method is clear and accurate, and there is no obvious conflict, we should spend a lot of money to develop the detector and adopt an automated method. Are you right?"

"Perhaps, but this person... is still a Chinese. He is not very sure about this technology, he is just hypothetical..."

"That's why you are allowed to verify the Qin of the Red Chamber." Dalbecco looked helpless.

"Well, let me verify." Nathan said reluctantly: "Not every good idea can be verified."

"Yang Rui, who is also the Chinese who wrote this letter, has already published a paper on "cell". The technology you saw before was also made by him." Dalbecko stared at the content of genetics all day. Naturally, I knew Yang Rui.

Nathan was a laboratory house, but frowned, and went back to do the experiment. He himself has published five papers as the first author on cns, and he has published more than 15 papers as the second author or less, so he doesn't care about a cell.

However, a cell can also explain the problem. At the very least, it is a hypothesis worth verifying, just as Dalbecco requested.

Dalbek returned to his desk, wrote a text message at his desk, and sent it back to Yang Rui.

In the letter, Dalbecco expressed his willingness to understand related issues, but after two or three sentences, Dalbecco focused on the fluorescent label.

He wants to learn more about fluorescent labeling, not—scholars may be wise men who are indifferent to money, but in academic research, scholars are still very profitable animals.

Of course, compared with the ubiquitous power of money, the power of academic research is weaker, and the less time they are involved in interests.

It is these high-level scholars who are most involved in academic interests.

The letter was sent to China in the fastest way, and Dalbecco attached the postage for the reply.

It is not that he is too caring, but that he is used to communicating with scholars in third world countries in this way. By reducing the communication cost of the other party, he can increase his information acquisition rate. This is a very wise investment in Dalbecco.

In the next few days, outside of daily affairs, Dalbec focused mainly on Nathan's experimental verification and waiting for Yang Rui's reply.

Experimenting is a very hard work, especially the cutting-edge research in the world. Sometimes just looking for available reference materials, or even looking for a frame of reference, people who are busy are dizzy.

Dalbecco needs such a breakthrough, but it is impossible for him to do it all.

The Human Genome Project will be an international cooperation project, as it was at the beginning of its design. In the future, Dalbecco expects to see tens of thousands of people participate in this project, and his own work cannot be done by himself.

He can only search for answers, put these fragmented answers together, and then win the approval of American academic circles and Congress.

The US$3 billion grant, even if it is not a one-time or one-year grant, is a huge project.

Dalbecco is not enough 24 hours a day. Naturally, he has no time to care about the ownership of a technology, let alone go to court. The only reason for his reply is because Yang Rui cares, and he just pretends to care in exchange for Yang Rui's concern for himself. The concern of the project is nothing more than.

Dalbek waited anxiously for this concern for a long time.

Just after cursing China's postal system for the third or fourth time, a thick letter was finally sent to Dalbecco's laboratory.

When Dalbeck saw this thickness, his mood suddenly became clear, and he immediately sent people to take Nathan's experimental records, ready to read Nathan's experimental records while reading the letters sent by Yang Rui to isolate the world.

At noon, Nathan learned about it when he was eating, and hurried over.

"You haven't eaten yet?" Nathan entered Darbeko's laboratory and saw the sandwich on his table.

"I'm not hungry." Dalbecco threw the sandwich into the trash.

"Yang Rui has sent a letter?" Nathan sat across from Dalbecco.

"Are you interested?"

"Don't say I am like a racial element, I just don't know about Asian research institutions."

"Oh, how is the experimental verification?"

"The progress is good, a little doubtful." Nathan said, looking at the letter in Dalbecco's hand.

The researcher is not a fool. If there is a standard answer, you will definitely have to look at it first.

In fact, reading the literature is the process of finding answers, at least a relative process. For some simple scientific research, the final result can often be guessed through the literature. Doing experiments is like reading the answers and then putting together numbers.

Nathan is generally interested in fluorescent labeling itself and does not think it is a challenging task. However, the answer to this experiment is very useful, and Nathan would like to see it from Yang Rui's letter.

Dalbecco handed the letter to Nathan and said: "Look at it for yourself, I have read it."

"After reading it, you still took it. He wrote the data in it?" Nathan suddenly realized this and hurried to read it. The most basic content in the laboratory is data.

Dalbecco said: "I wrote the data, but not all."

"He didn't finish the experiment?"

"No, it's done."

"Isn't that a good thing? Let him send the paper over~www.wuxiaspot.com~ He said that the paper is being written, but..." Dalbecco curled his lips and said, "You can see it for yourself."

Nathan was too anxious, so he had to sweep down in a glance.

Seeing the end, Nathan finally found the reason: "He designed a detector and applied for a patent?"

"Yes." Dalbecco muttered.

"Does he refuse to authorize? We are doing basic academic work..."

"He agreed to authorize, and only a nominal $1 authorization fee."

"what is the problem?"

"He wants me to be his expert witness." Dalbecco motioned to Nathan to continue watching.

Nathan then read the remaining bits of tail, and as expected he saw Yang Rui's euphemistic request.

After a little understanding of the whole story, Nathan laughed and said, "Dr. Dalbecko, the rest of the work is up to you. I hope you can get all the experimental data as soon as possible. Our team will do other work for the time being. "

Dalbecco can only nod his head. Appearing in court to testify is a very time-consuming task, but compared with repeated experiments in the laboratory, there are patent barriers that I don’t know whether it can be broken, and going in court saves time.

"I hate savvy guys." Dalbecco threw Yang Rui's letter aside, thought for a while, picked up the phone, and said, "Give me the relevant articles that I found, and then call Benjamin Brown Maazel Lawyers. So, I went to Benjamin and said it was a lawsuit."

...

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