For me, this is the most convincing account of why XMRV might be a contaminant that I've read yet.
But there's still so many questions to answer, and it's still too early to dismiss XMRV.
I don't think there's much point in arguing the points between ourselves, because only time will tell us the facts and, reassuringly, there seem to be quite a few studies being carried out by top quality scientists eager to understand the facts (e.g. Lipkin, Singh, Levy, Mikovits, Alter, Lo, the BWG, and a few others.)
Satterfield seems genuine, and is clearly an 'expert' in his specific field.
But the trouble is with 'experts' is that they often stick to rigid rules, and formulaic ways of doing things, and by doing so, can miss things.
Along comes a free thinking individual, and finds stuff that doesn't fit into the experts' predetermined world view, or doesn't fit into expected patterns of behaviour.
There's a couple of points where I thought Satterfield was being particularly stubborn about science needing to fit predetermined patterns.
One was the area of using the cloned virus or the monkey virus to make the PCR. He says that he must do it this way because that's the way it's done within the scientific community. Well, Judy Mikovits is breaking the mold, and maybe that's why she's getting unexpected results.
The other is that Satterfield says the history of contamination shows that this must also be a contaminant. Again, this suggests a certain lack of curiosity, and maybe a case of sticking to the text books too much.
The other thing I noticed is that all of these scientists are saying "this is the way we do science", and XMRV does not fit into our template of how we expect a virus to behave.
There's still a lot of questions to answer, and only further research will answer them.
I think one of the first questions to ask, at this stage is; is XMRV a human virus, or a mouse virus, or does it only exist in cell lines?
I can't help feeling that this virus does not exist only in cell lines, but time will tell.
If it is a human virus, then in which human populations does it reside?
The next question to answer is why does the WPI continue to get consistent and replicable results, no matter which lab they use to test the samples?
I remember, in the early days of XMRV, many of the 'experts' completely dismissed XMRV, and said that it wasn't a real virus, but was just mouse endogenous virus contamination. Now all the 'experts' seem to agree that XMRV is a real virus, and it isn't a mouse endogenous virus but it is something quite unexpected. So who was right all along? Judy Mikovits or all the other 'experts'? Judy was detecting a real virus all along, and not mouse contamination.
They said that Judy had mice in her lab. But she doesn't. It turns out that XMRV is created by a cell line being used in many labs across the world, and yet only Judy can detect XMRV (a real virus). She must be very clever. And she doesn't even use the cell line in her lab.
So, I prefer to keep an open mind about it all, and I tend not to rely on 'experts' too much... I've met too many of them who have let me down personally time and time again.
Also, we need to remember that there might now be more than one source of XMRV. One source might be the cell line. But XMRV might also have jumped into the wild, and infected humans, through vaccines or some other route. It's had many years to do so.
There might be another reason (other than Hue's reasons) why Judy's initial XMRV genetic material is so similar to that of the XMRV in the cell line and to the prostate cancer XMRV. It might be that this was the XMRV type that she detected first, using a very specific test coming from Silverman's study. (But I can't remember all the details on this.) If this was the case, then it would follow that she initially detected and analysed only XMRV very similar to the prostate cancer XMRV, and this would explain why it was more similar to the prostate cancer XMRV than the cell line XMRV, which Hue showed to be the case. Since then Judy says she has detected a wider variety of XMRV's and PMRV's, but has as yet not been able to publish her work, for whatever reason.
We also need to know what Harvey Alter has been doing all this time with his PMRV's.
We haven't heard a peep out of him since he published his study. Why not?