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Biotech Patent Law

Forty Years Since Diamond v. Chakrabarty: Legal Underpinnings and its Impact on the Biotechnology Industry and Society

U.S. Supreme Court buildingCPIP has published a new policy brief celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the Diamond v. Chakrabarty decision, where the Supreme Court in 1980 held that a genetically modified bacteria was patentable subject matter. The brief, entitled Forty Years Since Diamond v. Chakrabarty: Legal Underpinnings and its Impact on the Biotechnology Industry and Society and written by Matthew Jordan, Neil Davey, Maheshkumar P. Joshi, and Raj Davé, is dedicated to the late Dr. Ananda Chakrabarty, a pioneer in the biotechnology world, who passed away in July 2020.

Chakrabarty had a great impact on the biotechnology revolution, ushering in a new era of technological advances that have benefited humankind. Through interviews with Randall Rader, former Chief Judge of the Federal Circuit, and Dr. Chakrabarty himself, as well as case studies on genetically modified seeds, polymerase chain reactions, and monoclonal antibody therapies, the policy brief explores the importance and enduring implications for society of the Chakrabarty decision.

The introduction and conclusion sections are copied below:

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I. Introduction: The Diamond v. Chakrabarty (1980) Supreme Court Decision

In 1972, Ananda Chakrabarty—a genetic engineer at General Electric—filed a patent application for genetically modified bacteria capable of breaking down crude oil. Dr. Chakrabarty introduced genetic fragments into the Pseudomonas bacterium, altering the bacteria to decompose hydrocarbon components of crude oil. Dr. Chakrabarty intended the bacteria to assist in cleaning up oil spills. The engineered bacteria were especially suited for bioremediation given their resistance to adverse environments and safety as a non-pathogen.

The examiner rejected the application under Section 101 of the Patent Act, which covers patentable subject matter, because living things were not patentable. The Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (now known as the Patent Trial and Appeal Board) affirmed the examiner’s decision, however, the U.S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (now part of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit) sided with Dr. Chakrabarty. The Court of Customs, in an opinion by Judge Giles Rich, reasoned that only naturally occurring articles, not all living things, were ineligible for patenting. Importantly, the court said, “the fact that microorganisms are alive is a distinction without legal significance” for purposes of the patent law. Then, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) Commissioner Sidney Diamond appealed the case to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court of the United States held that Dr. Chakrabarty’s invention consisted of patentable subject matter. Section 101 states: “Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.” The Court ruled in a landmark 5-4 decision that Dr. Chakrabarty’s invention was a patentable, manmade, “composition of matter” or “manufacture.” Chief Justice Warren Burger famously quoted a Senate Report that was part of the legislative history for the Patent Act of 1952: patentable subject matter included “anything under the sun that is made by man.”

This decision had immense implications for biotechnology. It resulted in patents for genetically modified seeds, DNA amplification technology, and monoclonal antibody therapy. The rise of biotechnology has impacted many technological fields and society as a whole. The Supreme Court’s distinction between manmade and naturally occurring phenomena was clarified in Mayo v. Prometheus and AMP v. Myriad. The Court found that naturally occurring biological relationships and isolated DNA sequences were not eligible for patenting.

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V. Conclusion

Diamond v. Chakrabarty revolutionized the biotechnology industry in the United States by incentivizing the advancement of inventions that are beneficial to human life. However, as noted by Judge Randall Rader: “This whole patent eligibility question—which was so clear and well-defined, was practically implementable and understandable, and gave life to our whole biotech industry after Chakrabarty—now has had a heavy cloud cast over it in recent jurisprudence such as Myriad.”

When asked if our legislature should take action to clear up the confusion, Judge Rader stated: “If the statute was the written law that was being interpreted by the Supreme Court, we wouldn’t need legislative change. But the sad truth is that the Supreme Court has created a whole overlay of doctrine that makes the statute almost irrelevant. And now we don’t look at whether there’s a process, a machine, an article of manufacture, or a composition of matter. Instead, we look at whether there’s something more beyond the conventional and the routine and the well-known. We argue over what is something and what is more, and what is an inventive concept. And so in that state of confusion, yes, we’re probably going to need legislation.”

Within the dire context of the COVID-19 pandemic and other countries racing past the United States in biotechnology, it is crucial for Congress to clarify what currently qualifies as patentable subject matter.

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To read the policy brief, please click here.

Categories
CPIP Roundup

CPIP Roundup – July 31, 2020


Greetings from CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor

Sean O'Connor

I hope summer is seeing you healthy and safe. Over four months have passed since the Washington, D.C., area began to feel the impact of COVID-19. Now, as summer progresses and we start anticipating and planning for fall, we’re looking to navigate the new normal in the classroom, workplace, and of course in the virtual space.

In June, CPIP hosted the WIPO-CPIP Summer School on Intellectual Property for the third year running. Usually the program is held at Antonin Scalia Law School in Arlington, Virginia, and both U.S. and international attendees gather to study and network for two weeks in June. This year, however, we opted to move the entire program online, streaming it via Webex. Nearly one hundred attendees from all over the world were able to attend live virtual lectures and panels by a great lineup of experts, both in IP and related fields. We’re grateful to the CPIP staff, our IT support at Scalia Law, and to all our speakers and students for helping make this year’s Summer School successful and memorable in many ways.

As part of the Summer School, CPIP co-hosted a public panel, Patents on Life: Diamond v. Chakrabarty at 40, with the Smithsonian Institution’s Lemelson Center on June 17. We’re grateful to all the speakers who lent their expertise to this interesting and timely discussion, and most especially Dr. Ananda Chakrabarty, the inventor at the heart of the Diamond v. Chakrabarty case. Sadly, less than a month after the panel, we received the news that Dr. Chakrabarty had passed away. Our deepest condolences go out to his family and friends as we also remember his personal and professional legacy.

COVID-19 has complicated plans for many upcoming events, including ours. While we had hoped to hold our much-anticipated The Evolving Music Ecosystem conference in person by moving it from this past spring until the fall, best guidance now dictates that we move it online. We still look forward to a stellar event running from September 9-11, including a keynote address from Rosanne Cash. We will also move our Annual Fall Conference on October 8 to a fully online format. This year’s theme will focus on the IP issues surrounding the rollout of 5G wireless technology. Thank you for your patience as we pursue dual priorities: continuing to support the dialogue surrounding IP and keeping everyone involved safe and well.

I would like to congratulate and welcome Dr. Hina Mehta, Director of Mason’s Office of Technology Transfer, as an Affiliate Scholar with CPIP. Dr. Mehta has taught during the WIPO-CPIP Summer School these past two years, and we’re happy to have her join us and work with us on a more official basis.

I also want to thank those IP scholars who signed our May response to the Office of Science and Technology Policy’s call for comments on the possible effects of free, public access to scholarly research.

On a personal note, I have become a regular contributor to The Hill with a mix of IP and other opinion topics based on my broader historical research. Articles to date include: Avoiding Another Great Depression Through a Developmentally Layered Reopening of the Economy, Cancel Culture, Copyright, and the Harper’s Letter, and How We Finally Tip Into “Bread and Circuses’ Authoritarianism.

In May, I participated as a panelist for the COVID-19 CHHS Webinar Series with Mason’s College of Health and Human Services in the episode Weighing the Decision to Safely ‘Reopen’ Northern Virginia; the episode was also noted by DCist and Fairfax County Economic Development Authority. COVID-19 has not completely taken over all events and conversations, though. I spoke in April at a virtual session on copyright and social justice hosted by the University of Akron School of Law’s Intellectual Property & Technology Law Association, and in June at the NVTC Impact AI Conference on the panel Protecting AI Inventions: Current Issues and Best Practices.

I’d like to thank Akron’s Professor Camilla Hrdy for providing her comments on my paper Distinguishing Different Kinds of Property in Patents and Copyright, which was also shared on the Private Law Theory blog.

In conclusion, the past few months have been full and productive, and I look forward to seeing CPIP and our friends and supporters successfully navigate the remainder of 2020. I wish you the best over the coming months as we hope and cooperate to put COVID-19 behind us. Until then, we continue to be in this together.


Online Music Law Conference with Rosanne Cash on September 9-11

Rosanne Cash

We are excited to announce that the music law conference, The Evolving Music Ecosystem, which will be held online from Antonin Scalia Law School in Arlington, Virginia, has now been extended to a three-day event on September 9-11, 2020. The keynote address will be given by Rosanne Cash, and it features panel presentations from leading experts.

This unique conference continues a dialogue on the music ecosystem begun by CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor while at the University of Washington School of Law in Seattle. In its inaugural year in the D.C. area, the conference aims to bring together musicians, music fans, lawyers, artist advocates, business leaders, government policymakers, and anyone interested in supporting thriving music ecosystems in the U.S. and beyond.

For more information, and to register, please click here.


“Patents on Life” Panel Discussion Video Now Available

the U.S. Capitol

On June 17, 2020, CPIP and the Smithsonian Institution’s Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation co-hosted a virtual panel discussion entitled Patents on Life: Diamond v. Chakrabarty at 40. CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor delivered closing remarks after a panel presentation that included the late inventor and distinguished professor of microbiology and immunology Dr. Ananda Chakrabarty.

The panelists discussed the 1980 Supreme Court ruling in Diamond v. Chakrabarty that authorized the first patent on an intentionally genetically modified organism and that contributed to the rise of the modern biotechnology industry and reshaped the agriculture industry. Video from the panel discussion is available here, and our blog post summarizing it is available here.


Spotlight on Scholarship

a pair of glasses, an apple, and a stack of books

Christopher M. Holman, Congress Should Decline Ill-Advised Legislative Proposals Aimed at Evergreening of Pharmaceutical Patent Protection, 51 U. Pac. L. Rev. 493 (2020)

Many believe that drug prices in the U.S. are unnecessarily high because the pharmaceutical industry is exploiting legal loopholes and acquiring dubious patents to extend protection and delay generics from entering the market (so-called “evergreening” behavior by drug innovators). However, CPIP Senior Scholar Chris Holman of the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law has published a new paper arguing that these recent concerns regarding patents and drug prices are unfounded. The paper, entitled Congress Should Decline Ill-Advised Legislative Proposals Aimed at Evergreening of Pharmaceutical Patent Protection and published in the University of the Pacific Law Review, further challenges recent legislative proposals aimed at pharmaceutical evergreening, finding that they “are largely misguided, and, if enacted, would be likely to cause more harm than good by discouraging innovation in pharmaceuticals without effectively addressing the core concern.” Our blog post summarizing the paper is available here.

Michael S. Greve, Exceptional, After All and After Oil States: Judicial Review and the Patent System, 26 B.U. J. Sci. & Tech. L. 1 (2020)

What if there is a way for a patent applicant to obtain a “gold-plated patent” that is immune to administrative cancellation before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO)? This intriguing notion is the subject of a recent paper by Professor Mike Greve of Scalia Law, titled Exceptional, After All and After Oil States: Judicial Review and the Patent System and published in the Winter 2020 edition of the Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law. Prof. Greve presented an early draft of this paper at the “Perspectives on the PTAB: The New Role of the Administrative State in the Innovation Economy” conference that was co-hosted by CPIP and the Gray Center at Scalia Law. Our blog post summarizing the paper is available here.


Activities, News, & Events

a lit lightbulb hanging next to unlit bulbs

CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor continues to lead the law school’s new Innovation Law Clinic. The Clinic teams law students (IP, corporate, tax) to analyze and counsel entrepreneurs, creators, and inventors from the University’s internal and external communities. The course teaches students about entrepreneurship and commercializing innovation and creativity, as well as how to craft an overall legal strategy in the context of a client’s business, technology, and/or artistic vision. A core deliverable is the Innovator’s Roadmap, which provides a comprehensive, client eyes-only analysis of the venture and legal issues it needs to address in the near and mid-term. Anticipated projects include hydrogen fuel cell refilling technology venture; edutainment and fundraising franchise system for community building; emerging fashion designer; online platform for fictional world-building authors; and an innovative medical device venture spinning out of the University. Specific legal services to be delivered can include entity formation; securing or licensing IP; drafting employment agreements; and advice on tax filings.

CPIP Director of Copyright Research & Policy Sandra Aistars will lead the law school’s Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic again this fall. The Clinic teaches students the legal and policy skills required for engaging with Congress, agencies, and courts on behalf of copyright owners. Students will develop substantive legal knowledge in copyright and related areas of law as well as practical skills in research, writing, and advocacy by counseling clients and preparing legal and policy documents. Anticipated projects this fall include identifying ownership and clearing rights for illustration created in the 1960s, conducting an online legal clinic for members of Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts (WALA), contract drafting and strategic planning for a musician-owned music licensing service, and continued collaboration and special projects for the U.S. Copyright Office.

CPIP has published a new policy brief by CPIP Senior Fellow for Innovation Policy Jonathan Barnett entitled The Long Shadow of the Blackberry Shutdown That Wasn’t. The policy brief looks at how the Blackberry litigation and the “patent troll” narrative ultimately contributed to the Supreme Court’s 2006 decision in eBay v. MercExchange that limited the availability of injunctive relief for successful patentees. Prof. Barnett then examines the problematic legacy of the post-eBay case law, which significantly shifted the legal infrastructure supporting the U.S. innovation markets. In particular, he explains how this shift has led to opportunistic infringement that favors downstream incumbents with the resources to fund extensive litigation at the expense of upstream innovators—a dynamic that is exemplified in the recent litigation between Sonos and Google.


Categories
Biotech Patents

(Patented) Life Begins at Forty: CPIP Celebrates the Ongoing Legacy of Diamond v. Chakrabarty

The following post comes from Colin Kreutzer, a rising 2E at Scalia Law and a Research Assistant at CPIP.

gloved hand assembling or dissembling a model of DNABy Colin Kreutzer

It’s been forty years since the Supreme Court ruled in favor of patentability for a GE scientist and the oil-eating bacterium he’d created, greatly expanding the scope of living matter that was eligible to be patented. Previously, patents on living things were limited to botanical inventions such as novel plant varieties, but the Court in Diamond v. Chakrabarty opened the door to genetically modified living matter. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Burger held that because the bacteria were human-made and did not exist in nature, they fell under both the “manufacture” and “composition of matter” categories of invention per 35 U.S.C. § 101. The promise of IP protection for engineered microbial life gave a secure path to returns on investments, and it opened the floodgates to R&D in everything from life-saving drugs and cancer-screening tests, to Flavr Savr tomatoes and crop yields that promised to keep pace with a growing human population. The impact of this decision on biotech and related industries cannot be overstated.

But the legacy of Chakrabarty is still going strong. On Wednesday, June 17, CPIP and the Smithsonian’s Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation jointly hosted a panel of experts to discuss the landmark ruling. Moderated by Lemelson Director Arthur Daemmrich and with closing remarks by CPIP Executive Director Sean O’Connor, the panel featured: Dan Charles, science writer, National Public Radio food and agriculture correspondent; Daniel Kevles, Stanley Woodward Professor Emeritus of History, History of Medicine & American Studies, Yale University; Jennie Schmidt, farmer, registered dietitian nutritionist, and blogger at The Foodie Farmer; and the inventor, Dr. Ananda Chakrabarty, now a distinguished professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of Illinois College of Medicine. The panel reflected on how the ruling in Chakrabarty has affected intellectual property and the biotech industry, and some of the issues that leave room for improvement. See the full video here.

History

In the early 1970s, Dr. Chakrabarty was working with several strains of naturally occurring Pseudomonas bacteria, known for their potential in cleaning oil spills. Each strain was able to break down one of the various hydrocarbon types found within crude oil. In theory, combining them could break down all the major components of an oil spill and convert them into benign materials, such as food for aquatic life. But there was a problem: simply mixing different bacterial strains did not achieve a complete oil consumption profile. Some strains would dominate the mixture because every strain thrived under slightly different environmental conditions, and much of the oil would be untouched.

Dr. Chakrabarty determined that the key elements in each bacterium were sets of extra DNA called plasmids. Each bacterial strain had different plasmids that would break down different hydrocarbons. He used a UV radiation technique to transfer plasmids from one strain to another until he had a single bacterial strain with a preferred set of plasmids. This unified strain could consume a wide hydrocarbon profile without developing a plasmid imbalance. The end product was distinct from any naturally occurring bacterium, and GE filed a patent application for the invention on June 7, 1972.

The USPTO examiner allowed some of the patent claims: namely, a method of producing the bacteria; along with, an inoculum having the bacteria as one component. But claims directed solely to the bacterium were rejected on the grounds that 35 U.S.C. § 101 does not allow pure living matter to be patented. Protections for plants, while alive, are granted under different statutes: the 1930 Plant Patent Act deals with asexually-reproduced novel plants, and the 1970 Plant Variety Protection Act grants similar rights on other selectively bred species. Following affirmation at the BPAI and a reversal at the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, the Supreme Court granted certiorari. It heard the case on March 17, 1980, and issued an opinion on June 16, 1980.

Chief Justice Burger took issue with the Patent Office’s arguments that Congress, in drafting § 101, never gave express authorization to patent living things, and he didn’t see the plant exceptions as evidence that it never intended to. He countered that Congress had deliberately created a very expansive scope in § 101, and the Court was obliged to interpret it that way. The language was as clear as it was broad, and if the judiciary were going too far in its interpretation, the legislature would be free to correct the mistake. Further arguments, directed to the existential perils of genetic engineering, were met with similar skepticism.

Ultimately, the Chief Justice settled the argument in rather simple terms: that § 101 broadly covers a process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, or collectively, “anything under the sun that is made by man.” Since Dr. Chakrabarty’s work fell within those boundaries, the subject matter was patent eligible­—living or not.

Microbial Research

Dr. Chakrabarty and Daniel Kevles kicked off the discussion with a review of the scientific and legal history of the case. There was broad agreement among panelists that for microbial research, medicine, and the pharmaceutical industry, the ruling was a game-changer. Forty years ago, USPTO officials weren’t the only ones who believed that microbial lifeforms couldn’t be patented. Prof. Kevles, recounting a prior conversation with Dr. Chakrabarty, wondered if GE’s “patent everything” attitude and relative lack of biotech experience made it more willing to even attempt such a thing in an industry where many assumed it wasn’t allowed. Prof. Kevles also pointed to the precedential effect on contemporary developments, such as Stanford’s Cohen-Boyer recombinant DNA patents, which weren’t granted until after the Chakrabarty decision. And while the nation used the ruling to fuel an emerging industry, Dr. Chakrabarty (then a university professor) expanded his Pseudomonas research into treatments of cystic fibrosis and cancer cells.

Agriculture

Discussions of the state of agriculture were more mixed. Jennie Schmidt began with a big thanks for including a farmer’s voice on the panel. She spoke about several advancements that genetic engineering has brought to agriculture, and how they factored into her family business’ comprehensive farming approach, which include conventional and organic farming along with biotech. The adoption of biotech seeds has spread far more rapidly than the previous technological leap of hybridization in the 1920s and 1930s, and she deemed it essential to the survival of family farms in modern America. Biotech seeds are more resistant to herbicides, allow for the use of softer chemicals, and are better suited to no-till practices. Tillage, Ms. Schmidt noted, was a major cause of erosion and loss of sediment, phosphorus, and other nutrients to the nearby Chesapeake Bay. She also mentioned engineered products such as Bt-corn, which can reduce the need for pesticides that kill far more species than they target.

Dan Charles expressed concerns about the number of useable innovations in agriculture, compared to what had been promised in exchange for the added intrusion of corporate control into farming. He questioned how transformative GMOs have truly been by boiling the developments down to two major traits—herbicide resistance and pest resistance—and noting that pests already appear to be overcoming the latter. National Academy of Sciences studies, he said, had failed to identify any major difference in the crop yield trends between the pre- and post-GMO eras (likely referencing this study; see for example the summary at p.14).

Prof. Kevles conceded that he’d rather see more developments focused on increasing the vitamin and nutrient content of crops, rather than on sheer yields. To date, the bulk of the technological benefits have gone to reducing costs rather than to increasing consumer health. But he tempered this observation by putting it into the greater context of all genetic applications and emphasized the unquestionable impact that the Chakrabarty decision had on technology as a whole.

Ms. Schmidt also acknowledged Mr. Charles’s concerns and felt that things might be very different if the first GMO breakthroughs had been consumer-facing, rather than farm-facing, developments. She noted that IP issues have affected traditional farming practices such as seed saving, but she added that proprietary issues span the range of farming technologies and are not limited to biotech. She also pointed out that IP isn’t the only reason that seed-saving is a threatened practice: hybrid seeds, a long-established technology, are generally unsuitable for saving regardless of whether farmers may legally do so. Her farm still practices seed-saving when possible.

Mr. Charles agreed that the proprietary issues extend beyond biotech, and indeed pose problems for researchers wishing to access to the latest generation of seed technology, even for scholarly purposes. Further, he noted that decreasing access has led to problems of international agricultural cooperation.

On the subject of international issues, Dr. Chakrabarty stressed the importance of IP to developing countries in bringing their products to the market. He has been active for many years in advancing both biotech and IP as a means for less-developed nations to build wealth.

The State of R&D, Post-Chakrabarty

Another avenue of the discussion centered on the state of R&D then and now, in terms of large corporate laboratories versus the multitude of start-ups we often see today. Prof. Kevles was quick to point out that there is still a lot of research coming from the big firms, not only in chemistry and biotech, but also in the worlds of information technology and others. As far as the emergence of start-ups was concerned, credit also went appropriately to the Bayh-Dole Act. This helped universities retain IP rights to inventions that came from federally funded research and stimulated further growth of university tech transfer offices. The Chakrabarty decision and Bayh-Dole are both credited as significant events in the strengthening of America’s IP system.

Closing

Prof. O’Connor concluded with an in-depth explanation of the legal and scientific theories that separated the Chakrabarty decision from plant patents. He also addressed some of the fears that arise when discussing property rights on genetically engineered lifeforms. He emphasized that patent laws don’t grant the right to make or use something, but rather the right to exclude others from making or using it. As such, patent law can easily be superseded by other laws, such as those barring indentured servitude or the ownership of “all or part” of a human being. A more common example came from pharmaceuticals—a patent on a new drug is no good if the FDA won’t approve it.

Dr. Chakrabarty knows these problems all too well. Attendees asked him why his invention, the subject of the landmark ruling, didn’t itself go to market. It seems that IP wasn’t the only legal hurdle standing in the way of commercialization. Regulators were fearful of what might happen to the natural order if genetically modified bacteria were introduced into the ocean. Without sufficient data to prove that, for example, the engineered traits wouldn’t be acquired by harmful pathogens, they were unwilling to let it go forward.

The panel closed with a virtual exhibit presented by Smithsonian curator Peter Liebhold. He took panelists and attendees on a walk through the history of agricultural and genetic research, using a series of photos and artifacts that would have been shown in-person if COVID-19 hadn’t moved the program online. Hopefully, the biotech world, buoyed by a strong IP framework, will soon develop vaccines and treatments that can get us all back to normal.

The Chakrabarty case is a prime example of the vital role IP protection plays in fostering innovation and growth. It also serves as a reminder of why Congress intentionally granted such an expansive scope in 35 U.S.C. § 101: because it knew it wouldn’t be possible to envision the technology of the future, and it declined to stand in the way of whatever strange new wonders awaited the human imagination. CPIP is thrilled to have shared the stage with the Lemelson Center and the distinguished panelists as we observed the 40th birthday of this landmark ruling, and we wish to give a special thanks to Dr. Chakrabarty for joining us.