# Applera

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{{Short description|American Fortune 1000 company}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Applera Corporation
| logo =
| logo_caption =
| logo_upright = <!-- default: 1 -->
| logo_alt =
| type =
| industry = Biotechnology
| predecessor = <!-- or: | predecessors = -->Life Sciences Division of [Perkin-Elmer](/source/Perkin-Elmer)
| founded = <!-- if known: {{Start date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} in [city](/source/city), country -->
| founder = <!-- or: | founders = -->
| defunct = <!-- {{End date|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->2006
| fate = Spun off Celera Genomics in 2006, name changed to [Applied Biosystems](/source/Applied_Biosystems)
| successor = <!-- or: | successors = -->
| hq_location_city = [Norwalk, Connecticut](/source/Norwalk%2C_Connecticut)
| hq_location_country = United States
| area_served = <!-- or: | areas_served = -->
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| products =
| owner = <!-- or: | owners = -->
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| parent =
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}}

'''Applera Corporation''' of [Norwalk, Connecticut](/source/Norwalk%2C_Connecticut), at #874 on the 2007 [Fortune 1000](/source/Fortune_1000) list, was one of the largest international [biotechnology](/source/biotechnology) companies based in the United States. It was the successor company to what was the Life Sciences Division of [Perkin-Elmer](/source/Perkin-Elmer) Corporation. Applera was not publicly traded, but instead it consisted of two major groups which are publicly traded [tracking stock](/source/tracking_stock)s in the [proteomics](/source/proteomics) industrial sector. These two groups were the [S&P 500](/source/S%26P_500) listed '''Applera Corp-[Applied Biosystems](/source/Applied_Biosystems) Group''' of [Foster City, California](/source/Foster_City%2C_California), and '''Applera Corp-[Celera Genomics](/source/Celera_Genomics) Group''' of [Rockville, Maryland](/source/Rockville%2C_Maryland). In 2006, the company spun off the Celera Genomics group and changed its name from Applera to [Applied Biosystems](/source/Applied_Biosystems).

As the former Perkin-Elmer, Applera had a history dating back to 1931. But more precisely, its history dates from 1999, when Perkin-Elmer effectively split in half, and sold off its more traditional half of the business to [EG&G](/source/EG%26G) Inc. As part of the deal, it also sold the Perkin-Elmer name, because that most properly associated with that traditional line of products, and EG&G then became the new PerkinElmer. At that point the remaining Connecticut [Life Sciences](/source/Life_Sciences) company issued its two tracking stocks, and also changed its own name to '''PE Corporation'''. The Applied Biosystems group had earlier already been renamed '''PE Biosystems''', and it retained that name in the first incarnation of its tracking stock. In 2000, the Applied Biosystems name was restored to the group, with the new stock ticker symbol ABI, and PE Corporation became '''Applera''', a combination of its two components' names, '''Appl'''<sup>(iedCel)</sup>'''era'''.<ref name="sec001128">[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0000077551/000111053800000004/0001110538-00-000004-index.htm APPLERA CORP Form:8-K] sec.gov Filing Date: 11/28/2000</ref><ref name="8kpdf">[http://pdf.secdatabase.com/2762/0001110538-00-000004.pdf?CompnayName=APPLERA-CORP&Form=8-K APPLERA CORP Form:8-K PDF] SECDatabase, Accession Number: 0001110538-00-000004, Filing Date: November 28, 2000</ref>

==Board of directors==
The Applera Corporation Directors oversaw the parent corporation along with the operations of both tracking stock groups, and consequently they had the responsibility of fairly balancing the interests of both groups of investors in each stock.<ref name="PE99repboard">[http://pdf.secdatabase.com/2368/0001086144-99-000067.pdf?CompanyName=PE-Corporation&Form=10-K Directors and Officers, Board of Directors], SECDatabase, PE Corporation Annual Report - PDF, Filing Date: September 28, 1999</ref><ref name="nyt020422">[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9A01EED6103FF931A15757C0A9649C8B63 Sequencer of Genome to Change Focus], New York Times, By ANDREW POLLACK, Published: April 22, 2002</ref>
* Joseph F. Abely, Jr., director since 1984, retired chairman and  CEO of [Sea-Land Corporation](/source/Sea-Land_Corporation)
* [Robert H. Hayes](/source/Robert_H._Hayes), Ph.D., director since 1985, Philip Caldwell Professor at [Harvard Business School](/source/Harvard_Business_School)
* Richard H. Ayers, director since 1988, retired chairman and CEO of [The Stanley Works](/source/The_Stanley_Works)
* [Jean-Luc Bélingard](/source/Jean-Luc_B%C3%A9lingard), director since 1993, CEO of Pierre Fabre S.A.
* Carolyn W. Slayman, Ph.D., director since 1994, [Sterling Professor](/source/Sterling_Professor) and deputy dean of [Yale University School of Medicine](/source/Yale_University_School_of_Medicine)
* [Orin R. Smith](/source/Orin_R._Smith), director since 1995, chairman and CEO of [Engelhard Corporation](/source/Engelhard_Corporation)
* '''Tony L. White''', director since 1995, chairman, president and CEO of '''Applera Corporation'''
* Georges C. St. Laurent, Jr., director since 1996, principal of St. Laurent Properties and former CEO of Western Bank (Oregon)
* [Arnold J. Levine](/source/Arnold_J._Levine), Ph.D., director since 1999, president and CEO of [Rockefeller University](/source/Rockefeller_University)
* Theodore E. Martin, director since 1999, retired president and CEO of [Barnes Group](/source/Barnes_Group) Inc.
* James R. Tobin, director since 1999, president and CEO of [Boston Scientific](/source/Boston_Scientific) Corporation

==History==
The original Perkin-Elmer, and then its successor PE Corporation and Applera Corporation have been headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut. The company address is at 50 Danbury Rd.<ref name="sec001128"/><ref name="8kpdf"/>

In the early 1990s, Perkin-Elmer, which had been a maker of diverse electronic instruments and analytical and optical equipment,<ref name="stockguide">Standard & Poor's Stock Guide, various issues</ref> established strong ties with groups closely involved with the business of decoding the [human genome](/source/human_genome). By the late 1990s, Perkin-Elmer's [Life Sciences](/source/Life_Sciences) division had become centrally involved in highly publicized intense competition against the public consortium that was also working on the massive task. Consequently, Perkin-Elmer's people and companies became among the most famous players of the decade in [biotechnology](/source/biotechnology) and in that segment of the [technology bubble](/source/technology_bubble). In the process, Perkin-Elmer divided and transformed itself into Applera, a company entirely focused in life sciences.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

Beginning in 1990, the U.S. government approved financing to support the [Human Genome Project](/source/Human_Genome_Project) (HGP). [James D. Watson](/source/James_D._Watson), who founded the public consortium, forecast that the project could be completed in 15 years from its 1990 starting date, at a cost of US$3 billion.<ref name="nytweb000627"/> The HGP was a public consortium of eight university centers funded through the [U.S. Department of Energy](/source/U.S._Department_of_Energy), the [National Institutes of Health](/source/National_Institutes_of_Health) and the [Wellcome Trust](/source/Wellcome_Trust) of London. The government-backed project targeted completion of human DNA mapping by the year 2005.<ref name="forbes"/>

In 1993, Perkin-Elmer acquired a key equipment maker, [Applied Biosystems](/source/Applied_Biosystems), Inc., and that stock's symbol ABIO ceased trading on the [NASDAQ](/source/NASDAQ) exchange, as it became a division of Perkin-Elmer. Michael W. Hunkapiller, Ph.D., who had been Applied Biosystem's chairman, president and CEO since 1983,<ref name="nytweb000627">[http://partners.nytimes.com/library/national/science/062700sci-genome-history.html READING THE BOOK OF LIFE, Double Landmarks for Watson: Helix and Genome], The New York Times on the Web, By NICHOLAS WADE, June 27, 2000</ref> became a senior vice president of Perkin-Elmer, and president of the Applied and PE Biosystems Divisions.<ref name="PE99repoff">[http://edgar.secdatabase.com/2368/108614499000067/filing-main.htm?CompanyName=PE-Corporation&FormType=10-K&FilingDate=1999-09-28  Corporate Officers], PE Corporation, 1999 Annual Report, Accession Number: 0001086144-99-000067, Period of Report: June 30, 1999</ref>

In 1994, Perkin-Elmer reported net revenues of over $1 billion, of which Life Sciences accounted for 42% of the business. The company has 5,954 employees. The new competitive [genomics](/source/genomics) industry had formed for the development of new pharmaceuticals, based on the work of the Human Genome Project. The Applied Biosystems Division made [thermal cycler](/source/thermal_cycler)s and automated sequencers for these new genomics companies.<ref name="appliedtime">[https://appliedbiosystems.com/.../celebrating_25_years_aln_article.pdf Applied Biosystems Timeline]{{dead link|date=October 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

In 1995, Perkin-Elmer sold its 30,000th thermal cycler. To meet Human Genome Project goals, Perkin-Elmer developed mapping kits with markers every 10 million bases along each [chromosome](/source/chromosome). Also that year, [DNA fingerprinting](/source/DNA_fingerprinting) using [polymerase chain reaction](/source/polymerase_chain_reaction) (PCR) became accepted in court as reliable forensic evidence. In 1993, Perkin-Elmer had become the world's leading manufacturer of instruments and reagents for (PCR). It marketed PCR reagents kits in alliance with [Hoffman-La Roche](/source/Hoffman-La_Roche) Inc.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In 1996, Perkin-Elmer acquired [Tropix](/source/Tropix), Inc., a [chemiluminescence](/source/chemiluminescence) company, for its life sciences division.<ref name="sec001128"/><ref name="8kpdf"/>

===PE Applied Biosystems Division===
Also In 1996, Tony L. White from [Baxter International](/source/Baxter_International) Inc. became president and chief executive officer of Perkin-Elmer and reorganized it into two separate operating divisions, Analytical Instruments and '''PE Applied Biosystems'''. The PE Applied Biosystems division accounted for half of Perkin-Elmer's total revenue, with net revenues up by 26%.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In 1997, Perkin-Elmer revenues reached almost US$1.3 billion, of which PE Applied Biosystems was US$653 million. Acquisitions included GenScope, Inc., and Linkage Genetics, Inc., which combined with Zoogen to form '''PE AgGen''', focused on genetic analysis services for plant and animal breeding. Partnerships were begun with Hyseq, Inc., on the new [DNA chip](/source/DNA_chip) technology, and also with Tecan U.S., Inc., on [combinatorial chemistry](/source/combinatorial_chemistry) automation systems, and also with [Molecular Informatics](/source/Molecular_Informatics), Inc. on genetic data management and analysis automated systems.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In 1998, Perkin-Elmer acquired [PerSeptive Biosystems](/source/PerSeptive_Biosystems) (formerly {{NASDAQ|PBIO}}), a leader in the bio-instrumentation field where it made [biomolecule](/source/biomolecule) purification systems for protein analysis.<ref name="sec001128"/><ref name="8kpdf"/><ref name="stockguide"/><ref name="mit">[http://entrepreneurship.mit.edu/practitioners.php Practitioners, NOUBAR B. AFEYAN, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070604033056/http://entrepreneurship.mit.edu/practitioners.php |date=June 4, 2007 }}, MIT Entrepreneurship Center</ref> [Noubar Afeyan](/source/Noubar_Afeyan), Ph.D., had been the founder, chairman, and CEO of PerSeptive, and after the acquisition he became a senior vice president and chief business officer of Perkin-Elmer. He had earlier founded and co-built several successful life science and technology startup companies through the 1990s, after earning his Ph.D. in [biochemical engineering](/source/biochemical_engineering) from the [Massachusetts Institute of Technology](/source/Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology) in 1987.<ref name="mit"/>

===PE Biosystems Division===
In 1998, Perkin-Elmer formed the PE Biosystems division, by consolidating Applied Biosystems, PerSeptive Biosystems, Tropix and PE Informatics. Informatics was formed from the Perkin-Elmer combination of two other acquisitions, [Molecular Informatics](/source/Molecular_Informatics) and Nelson Analytical Systems, with existing units of Perkin-Elmer.<ref name="sec001128"/><ref name="8kpdf"/>

By 1998, Perkin-Elmer had a presence on the [World Wide Web](/source/World_Wide_Web) at http://www.perkin-elmer.com.<ref name="buswire990429">[https://web.archive.org/web/20090302121240/http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc.aspx?id=1G1:54506273 PE Biosystems Chosen to Supply DNA Sequencers to Public Human Genome Project.], Encyclopedia.com, From: Business Wire, press release, Date: 4/29/1999</ref>

While planning the next new generation of machines, PE Biosystems' president, Michael W. Hunkapiller, calculated that it would be possible for their own private industry to decode the human genome before the academic consortium could complete it. The company would decode all of the 3.5 billion chemical letters in the human [DNA](/source/DNA) by 2001, at a cost of only US$200 million, about 1/10 of the consortium projected cost of US$3 billion.<ref name="forbes"/> However, it would mean starting from scratch, eight years already into the consortium's program.<ref name="nytweb000627"/> It was a bold prediction, given that the consortium target date set by Watson back in 1990 had been the forward year of 2005, only seven years away, and with the consortium already half the way to the completion target date by then.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

Also, it meant that Hunkapiller's idea would require competing against his own customers, to all of whom Applied Biosystems sold its sequencing machines and their chemical reagents. However, he calculated that it would also mean doubling the market for that equipment.<ref name="nytweb000627"/>

Hunkapiller brought in [J. Craig Venter](/source/J._Craig_Venter) to direct the project. Tony L. White, president of the Perkin-Elmer Corporation backed Hunkapiller on the venture. Perkin-Elmer's interest was driven largely by its monopoly, through the equipment of Applied Biosystems, of the market for automated [DNA sequencing](/source/DNA_sequencing) machines. Venter boldly declared to the media that he would complete the genome decoding by 2001.<ref name="forbes"/><ref name="buswire990429"/> That bold pronouncement prompted the academic consortium to accelerate their own deadline by a couple years, to 2003.<ref name="nytweb000627"/>

In May 1998, the company's newly formed unit to accomplish the task, Celera Genomics Group, in Rockville, Maryland, was created to become the definitive source of genomic and related medical information with the goal of sequencing the human genome by the year 2001.<ref name="buswire990429"/> Celera became the primary commercial competitor to the government-funded effort of the Human Genome Project. Venter became president and chief scientific officer of Celera.<ref name="forbes"/>

At the time, Venter operated his own independent lab, [The Institute for Genomic Research](/source/The_Institute_for_Genomic_Research) (TIGR), which had developed a "random shotgun" approach to DNA decoding, making it the most prolific genome lab in the world.<ref name="forbes"/>

At year end 1998, the PE Biosystems Group's sales reached US$940 million. Its chief new [genomics](/source/genomics) instrument was the ABI PRISM 3700 DNA Analyzer, which it had developed in conjunction with [Hitachi, Ltd.](/source/Hitachi%2C_Ltd.)<ref name="buswire990429"/> The new machine, an [electrophoresis](/source/electrophoresis)-based genetic analysis system, cost US$300,000 each, but was a major leap beyond its predecessor, the 377, and was fully automated, allowing genetic decoding to run around the clock with little supervision.<ref name="appliedtime"/> According to Venter, the machine was so revolutionary that it could decode in a single day the same amount of genetic material that most DNA labs could produce in a year.<ref name="forbes"/>

The partnership sold hundreds of the 3700 analyzers to Celera, and also to others worldwide.<ref name="appliedtime"/> The public consortium also bought one of the Applied Biosytems 3700 sequencers, and had plans to buy 200 more. The machine proved to be so fast that by late March 1999 the consortium announced that it had revised its timeline, and would release by the Spring of 2000 a "first draft sequence" for 80% of the human genome.<ref name="forbes"/>

===PE Corporation===
On March 19, 1999, Perkin-Elmer Corporation, as a New York corporation, filed SEC [Form S-4](/source/Form_S-4)/A, to enter a reincorporation merger with a subsidiary of PE Corporation of Delaware. Shareholders of the New York corporation stock (NYSE:PKN) would receive shares in two new stocks instead.<ref name="sec990319">[http://www.secinfo.com/dVut2.6Aav.htm Applera Corp SEC Form S-4/A], secinfo.com Filed On 3/19/99, SEC File 333-67797, Accession Number 1047469-99-10576</ref>

On April 27, 1999,<ref name="forbes">[https://web.archive.org/web/20010709183131/http://forbes.com/1999/04/29/feat2_print.html Human genome race tweaked by Celera's stock offer], Forbes.com, April 29, 1999</ref> the shareholders of Perkin-Elmer Corporation approved the reorganization of Perkin-Elmer into a pure-play life science company,<ref name="pebletter99">[http://www.applera.com/annualreports/annual99/letter_mike.html How can we enable new exploration? a letter from michael hunkapiller, ph.d., president, PE Biosystems] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928200337/http://www.applera.com/annualreports/annual99/letter_mike.html |date=September 28, 2007 }}, PE Corporation, 1999 Annual Report</ref> resulting in the name change to '''PE Corporation''' and the de-listing of the PKN stock. Each share of the Perkin-Elmer New York (PKN) was to be exchanged for one share and for {{frac|1|2}} of a share respectively of the two new common share tracking stocks for the two component Life Sciences groups, '''PE Biosystems Group''' (NYSE:PEB) and '''Celera Genomics Group''' (NYSE:CRA).<ref name="buswire990429"/><ref name="sec990319"/> <sup>(PKN now)<ref name="sec031014">[http://www.secinfo.com/dr66r.22wj.htm SEC Info - Petrokazakhstan Inc - 6-K - For 10/14/03], secinfo.com, October 14, 2003. On June 2, 2003, the PKN ticker symbol was briefly taken over by a small foreign issue, PetroKazakhstan Inc., which changed from HHL to PKN. On October 14, 2003, PetroKazakhstan Inc. filed with the SEC that it would again change its ticker symbol, to PKZ effective October 16, 2003, listed on the LSE, TSX and the NYSE exchanges, in London, Toronto and New York. PetroKazakhstan Inc. was subsequently acquired by a private company on October 26, 2005.</ref></sup>

On April 28, 1999, the two replacement tracking stocks for the new PE Corporation were issued to shareholders.<ref name="pebletter99"/> The [Pacific Stock Exchange](/source/Pacific_Stock_Exchange) began trading PE Corporation options for the two new stocks that day.<ref name="forbes"/> Michael W. Hunkapiller remained as senior vice president of PE Corporation, and as president of PE Biosystems.<ref name="buswire990429"/> Afeyan initiated and oversaw the creation of the tracking stock for Celera Genomics Group.<ref name="mit"/> Then later in 1999 Afeyan left, to co-found Flagship Ventures, an early-stage [entrepreneur](/source/entrepreneur)ial [venture capital](/source/venture_capital) firm.<ref name="mit"/> J. Craig Venter remained as senior vice president of PE Corporation and also president of Celera Genomics Group. Tony L. White remained as PE Corporation's chairman, president and chief executive officer.<ref name="PE99repoff"/>

Other officers who remained in PE Corporation included William B. Sawch, as senior vice president, general counsel and secretary.<ref name="PE99repoff"/>

On May 6, 1999, the reorganization was made effective, as the Perkin-Elmer Corporation was merged into a temporarily created subsidiary of PE Corporation, a new Delaware corporation. The recapitalization of the company resulted in issuance of the two new classes of common stock, called PE Corporation-PE Biosystems Group Common Stock and PE Corporation-Celera Genomics Group Common Stock.<ref name="PE99repnotes">Notes to summary of financial statements, PE Corporation 1999 Annual Report</ref> On that date, trading began in both new stocks on the [New York Stock Exchange](/source/New_York_Stock_Exchange), to great excitement.<ref name="forbes"/>

On May 28, 1999, as part of the recapitalization and reorganization, the company completed the sale of its traditional business unit, the Analytical Instruments Division to EG&G Inc., along with the Perkin-Elmer name, for US$425 million.<ref name="peceoletter">[http://www.applera.com/annualreports/annual99/letter_tony.html What is the logic of biology? a letter from tony white to our shareholders] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090907001621/http://www.applera.com/annualreports/annual99/letter_tony.html |date=September 7, 2009 }}, PE Corporation, 1999 Annual Report, CEO letter</ref><ref name="nyt990715">[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F00E6DA173FF936A25754C0A96F958260 COMPANY NEWS; PERKIN-ELMER CUTS 12% OF WORK FORCE], New York Times, Published: July 15, 1999</ref> EG&G was based in [Wellesley, Massachusetts](/source/Wellesley%2C_Massachusetts), and made products for diverse industries including automotive, medical, aerospace and photography. On July 14, 1999, that new analytical instruments maker PerkinElmer cut 350 jobs, or 12%, in its cost reduction reorganization.<ref name="nyt990715"/>

On June 17, 1999, the board of PE Corporation announced a two-for-one split of PE Biosystems Group Common Stock.<ref name="PE99repnotes"/>

At year end 1999, after the major divestment that year of the former Analytical Instruments Division, the new PE Corporation assets totalled over US$1.5 billion, split between the two Life Sciences groups.<ref name="PE99repnotes"/> Of that, PE Biosystems Group, with 3,500 employees had net revenues of over US$1.2 billion.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

By June 2000, the genomics segment of the [technology bubble](/source/technology_bubble) was peaking. Celera Genomics (CRA) and PE Biosystems (PEB) were among   five genetics pioneers leading at that time, along with Incyte Genomics ({{NASDAQ|INCY}}), [Human Genome Sciences](/source/Human_Genome_Sciences) ({{NASDAQ|HGSI}}), and [Millennium Pharmaceuticals](/source/Millennium_Pharmaceuticals) ({{NASDAQ|MLNM}}). All five of those stocks by then had exceeded a price above $100 a share in the market, before ultimately crashing back down.<ref name="busweek2000">[http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_24/b3685011.htm The Slow, Painful Path to Payday in Genomic Stocks] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070807005432/http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_24/b3685011.htm |date=August 7, 2007 }}, Businessweek Online, By David Shook in New York, JUNE 12, 2000 ISSUE</ref>

===Applera===
On November 28, 2000, PE Corporation filed SEC [Form 8-K](/source/Form_8-K) to report its announcement of the change of its name to '''Applera Corporation'''. At the same time, PE Biosystems Group changed its name to '''Applied Biosystems Group''', and changed its ticker symbol from PEB to ABI. Both name changes became effective November 30, 2000. Also that date, the parent corporation web site address changed from https://web.archive.org/web/20070929001200/http://www.pecorporation.com/ to https://web.archive.org/web/20070822133148/http://www.applera.com:80/<ref name="sec001128"/><ref name="8kpdf"/>

The combined Applera then had 5,000 employees. PE/Applied Biosystems Group's net revenues rose to almost US$1.4 billion. Celera that year made milestone headlines when it announced that it had completed the sequencing and first assembly of the two largest genomes in history, that of the [fruit fly](/source/Drosophila_melanogaster), and of the human.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In 2001, the Applied Biosystems division of Applera reached revenues of US$1.6 billion, and developed a new workstation instrument specifically for the new field of [proteomics](/source/proteomics), which had become Celera's new core business focus, as it shifted away from gene discovery. The instrument analyzed 1,000 protein samples per hour.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In January 2002, J. Craig Venter was pushed out of Celera, when it was decided that the group would make pharmaceuticals instead. Venter lacked experience in pharmaceutical development.<ref name="nyt020422"/>

On April 22, 2002, the Celera Genomics Group announced its decision to abandon what had been its core business since its 1998 inception, and to shift the role of marketing data from its genetic database over to its sister company, the Applied Biosystems Group. Celera would instead develop pharmaceutical drugs. Applera CEO Tony L. White had noted earlier that the database business would distract from pharmaceutical development.<ref name="nyt020422"/>

Applied Biosystems was a better fit for the database, because Applied already had the huge sales force in place for the marketing of its instruments. Plans were to expand those sales and those of the database into an electronic commerce system.<ref name="nyt020422"/>

The database itself, Celera Discovery System (CDS),<ref name="appliedtime"/> would remain with Celera, because of shareholder approval complications. Celera would retain responsibility for its maintenance and support to existing customers, and would receive royalties from Applied Biosystems. The database revenues were expected to reach US$100 million for the June fiscal year end, which would be its first profitable year. But it had always faced the problem that its public competitor, the consortium project, provides free data from its own database.<ref name="nyt020422"/>

In 2002, Applied Biosystems Group again posted revenues of US$1.6 billion for the year.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

In 2004, the long-term Applied Biosystems president, Mike Hunkapiller, retired and Cathy Burzik, who had joined the Group in 2003, replaced him as president of Applied Biosystems Group.<ref name="appliedtime"/>

== See also ==
* [List of companies based in Norwalk, Connecticut](/source/List_of_companies_based_in_Norwalk%2C_Connecticut)

==References==
{{reflist|33em}}

Category:Holding companies established in 1999
Category:Companies based in Norwalk, Connecticut
Category:Biotechnology companies of the United States
Category:1999 establishments in Connecticut
Category:Biotechnology companies established in 1999
Category:Biotechnology companies disestablished in 2006
Category:2006 disestablishments in Connecticut

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Applera](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applera) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applera?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
