Team:DTU-Denmark/IP and Synthetic Biology

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Discussion on IP and Synthetic Biology

Contents

Participants

In order to discuss the issues around intellectual property rights and synthetic biology, we attended an event hosted by [http://biopeople.dk/ BioPeople] called "The Basics and the Best". This event consisted of a series of three lectures:

  • "" by Jakob Krag Nielsen, IP lawyer at Rønne & Lundgren
  • "" by Michael Cohen, IP lawyer at Gray Plant Moody
  • "" by Thomas Tscherning, director at TTO of Aarhus University

We had a question and answer session with the following speakers following their lectures. Our discussion focused around the impact that the recent Myriad Genetics US Supreme Court ruling would have on synthetic biology.

Lecture Summary

The discussion gave us an interesting perspective on the way that people outside academia view patents and IP law.

Patents can be granted on any useful technology that is novel and not obvious.

If patents are granted on the raw genes, this means that the gene is not available for other researchers to use.

Companies want to patent their technologies, because this gives them the ability to prevent other companies using these technologies without paying a licensing fee. Having a patent does not necessarily grant the holder "freedom to operate", or, the ability to use the technology explained by the patent.

License agreements between parties may grant the rights to manufacture and distribute, but do not necessarily grant the right to use a technology.

License agreements between a patent holder and a licensee may change the terms of payment of royalties, and an interpretation of contract law will determine whether these agreements are enforceable. An example is Listerine who agreed to a payment in perpetuity was required to continue paying fees even though nearly the same formulation was used by competitors for no fee. Another example is a company whose agreement to pay a reduced licensing fee for a longer duration than the patent was struck down.

The biggest take away here is that if you want or need to engage in IP agreements, it is imperative to have good lawyers.

IP related to iGEM

We dug into the terms of the Biobrick Public Agreement, and found that this is an agreement similar to the GPL (a software license for free software), but with a slightly different implementation because biotechnology is protected by patents, not by copyright. Also, the BPA does not include a viral clause like the GPL does (which states that if I modify your software that is covered by the GPL, then my new modified version must also be covered by the GPL).

This means that a users who uses a part from the BPA agrees to provide proper attribution to whoever submitted it and additionally agrees to respect biological safety practices and applicable laws. Someone who contributes a part to the BPA agrees to "not to assert any existing or future intellectual property rights" (such as demand licensing fees) against any user of the part that they contributed. This means that Biobricks will remain free for anyone to use, and doing so will not carry any risk of drawing a patent infringement lawsuit.

We assume that we have agreed to the BPA when we signed up for an iGEM and parts registry account, but we were not able to find this information on the iGEM website. This information is also not available on the distribution plates, and it does not seem to be available in the [http://parts.igem.org/Help:2013_DNA_Distribution help information available in the parts registry].

Background: Myriad Genetics Ruling Summary

Myriad Genetics manufactures a genetic test for BRCA1 and BRCA2, which relies on detecting cDNA. They held a patent that granted them exclusive right to use and generate derivatives of these genes. This patent was challenged by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), who held that genes should not be patentable.

Recently, the US Supreme Court ruled on the Myriad Genetics case stating that while naturally occurring human genes cannot be patented, cDNA which is derived from a human gene can be.


Interview with the Speakers

Why aren't genes subject to copyright instead of patent law?

Jakob: According to IP law in Denmark, technology can only be patented, it cannot be copyrighted. Michael: In the US, no one has tried to copyright genes, but it could be possible.

The ruling was applied only to the non-patentability of human genes; is it reasonable to expect that it will be extended to all natural genes?

All: Not going to speculate

Are the mutants that we are creating patentable?

Jakob: Recombining genes in a novel order is sufficient modification to expect that a patent would be granted

Is this ruling in the best interest of society?

Michael: At the end of the day, funding for genetic research is not going away.

Are there provisions in patent law for academic or personal use?

Jakob: In Europe, you cannot prevent reverse engineering for interoperability

Part of the ruling states that the splicing of introns from the genes is a factor in the 'artificiality' of the cDNA construct -- does this limit patentability of prokaryotic genes since they don't have introns?

All: Declined to comment

The information content of cDNA is the same as the template RNA (after intron splicing) and is patentable, but mRNA which has the same information content as the original DNA is not patentable. Thoughts?

Michael: Agree, the information content is not the important part.


At the workshop. Left to right: Jakob Krag Nielsen, iGEM team, Michael Cohen, Thomas Tscherning.