Quantcast
Channel: SpicyIP
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2950

NSAI’s Lopsided Take on Patenting of Biotech Innovation in Agriculture 

$
0
0

Last week, we had brought to you a guest post by NSAI on the ongoing Monsanto-Nuziveedu patent dispute. We now bring to you another guest post on this dispute by Mr. Bhagirath Choudhary, the founder director of the South Asia Biotechnology Centre (SABC), New Delhi and Dr. Usharani KS, who practices at Prometheus Patent Services, Hyderabad. This post is in response to NSAI’s post, which in turn was in response to Prashant’s post on whether Monsanto’s invention can be protected as a plant variety and seek benefit-sharing from Nuziveedu.

 

NSAI’s Lopsided Take on Patenting of Biotech Innovation in Agriculture 

Bhagirath Choudhary & Usharani KS

The post by NSAI on a patent dispute between two private parties, Nuziveedu vs. Monsanto, defies the logic and reasoning of patenting biotech innovations under the Indian Patents (Amendment) Act 2005 and the protection of seeds and plant varieties under the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act 2001. NSAI’s sloppy post also favors the views and position of one party and openly flouts the rights of other members who may not prescribe such lopsided position, which is contrary to the spirit of innovation and intellectual property rights (IPRs) in agriculture sector. In summary, the NSAI’s position on the impugned patent is self-contradictory, disregards 420+ similar biotech patents filed/granted to scientists from both public and private sector institutions and raises emotional and nationalist perspective by twisting and churning of different laws to benefit one party against imminent national loss. In the following paras, we put together our brains over what is the subject matter of Monsanto’s patent, provisions under PPVFRA 2001 & IPA 2005 and the dispute, in this case:

Monsanto’s patent has two claim sets that are directed towards nucleic acid or gene sequences (Claims 25-27) and methods for producing transgenic plants (Claims 1-24). Both the claims viz. the man-made nucleic acid or gene sequences and the man-made processes (not an essential biological process) of transferring the man-made gene sequences (a novel product) into the genome of a plant, emanate from human ingenuity.

Claims 25 to 27 have the preamble “nucleic acid sequence” defining a biotechnological product and the body of the independent claim 25 “a promoter operably linked to a first polynucleotide sequence encoding a plastid transit peptide, which is linked in frame to a second polynucleotide sequence encoding a Cry2Ab Bacillus thuringiensis 8-endotoxin protein, wherein expression of said nucleic acid sequence by a plant cell produces a fusion protein comprising an amino-terminal plastid transit peptide covalently linked to said 5-endotoxin protein, and wherein said fusion protein functions to localize said 5-endotoxin protein to a subcellular organelle or compartment” clearly establishes that the biotechnological product is man-made where the Cry2Ab gene from a microorganism conferring the insecticidal trait is engineered to be expressed in a suitable system. Thus the man-made nucleic acid or gene sequences do not exist in nature, cannot be considered a part of plant, and are novel biotech products.

Claims 1 to 24 have the preamble “method for producing a transgenic plant” categorizing them as process claims with a primary purpose of producing transgenic plants. The body of the claim “incorporating into its genome a nucleic acid sequence comprising a plant functional promoter sequence operably linked to a first polynucleotide sequence encoding a plastid transit peptide, which is linked in frame to a second polynucleotide sequence encoding a Cry2Ab Bacillus thuringiensis 5-endotoxin protein, wherein said plastid transit peptide functions to localize said 5-endotoxin protein to a subcellular organelle or compartment” discloses the method of incorporating the above identified biotechnological products into a plant genome under lab conditions. The transformants were then selected and regenerated to obtain stable transgenic seeds and transgenic plants with the insecticidal Bt trait. Thus, this process of integrating novel gene sequences into plant genome with substantial human intervention is not an “Essential Biological Process”.

Monsanto transformed Coker variety of cotton seed with the man-made gene sequences claimed in the impugned patent thereby conferring Bt trait to the Coker variety. The novel gene sequences were then transferred from the Coker variety through conventional breeding by the intended party (sub-licensees in this case) into their desired cotton variety fit for Indian agro-climatic conditions. Here both novel products and processes are protected as a patent by the inventor (Monsanto in this case) under the IPA 2005, and the resultant desired cotton variety with novel gene sequences is protected by the owner of variety (sub-licensee Nuziveedu in this case) under the PPVFRA 2001. Both PPVFRA 2001 and IPA 2005 clearly demarcate what is patentable under IPA 2005 and what can be protected under PPVFRA 2001, and any other interpretation is erroneous and misleading.

Evidently, the disputed patent does not have claims directed towards the transgenic plants or transgenic seeds i.e. Coker variety of cotton seeds containing novel gene sequences that were obtained from the methods for producing such transgenic seeds, which is merely a carrier of novel nucleic acid or gene sequences (claims 1 to 24). Since, the novel gene sequences are non-specific to an organism/species/kingdom, the same gene sequences can be moved into any other plant species, microbes or other suitable organisms and are certainly not a part of the plant. This is also why Monsanto and other inventors of similar novel gene sequences (so far around 420+ patent applications for such novel gene sequences and/or processes have been either filed/granted by IPA 2005) can’t protect their inventions under the PPVFRA 2001.

The PPV&FR Act 2001 protects a specific plant variety or a specific hybrid and its parents which fulfils the magic criteria of DUS – Distinctness, Uniformity & Stability. Any variety that conforms to DUS criterion with or without novel gene sequences, can be protected under the PPVFRA. In comparison, patents are granted to novel biotech innovations that essentially conform to the magic criteria of Novelty, Inventive Step and Industrial Application. Therefore, neither IPA 2005 requires a variety or a seed or a crop for the patent claims other than indicating its industrial application nor the PPVFRA requires novel gene sequences for protecting a plant variety or hybrid and its parents. Thus both IPA 2005 and PPVFRA 2001 are complementary and shall co-exist to foster biotech innovations on one hand, and improved plant varieties on the other hand for the benefits of innovators, breeders and farmers.

Regarding the provisions for claim of exclusive rights under section 28 of the PPVFRA, the breeder of the protected variety or a hybrid and its parent enjoys the protection under PPVFRA to produce, to license, to sell, to market, to distribute, to import and to export the protected variety. If gene patents are revoked as in Monsanto’s case, the patent holder of novel gene sequences could enjoy all these benefits only when they move such patent in the form of seeds, and shall be denied benefits of production of pure protein through any other form such as microbes and other methods, which are not protected under PPVFRA. Therefore, denying patent on novel gene sequences will limit the industrial application of such biotech innovations to seeds only, and inhibits their other industrial applications. Similarly, the PPVFRA doesn’t have any provision for claim of benefit sharing of patented gene sequences under section 26, and is limited to access, extent, nature and use of genetic resource in developing new variety or essentially derived variety (EDV). Therefore, any argument by NSAI on claims of registration under section 15, claims for benefits sharing under section 26 and claims for exclusive rights under section 28 on patented gene sequences under PPVFRA is misleading, farce and deceptive.

In a nutshell, following key points raised by NSAI are self-contradictory and are a smear campaign to confuse and convolute the issue on the disputed patent including:

  • The Court held that Monsanto cannot have patent on transgenic seeds per se” – The disputed patent does not claim transgenic plants or seeds.
  • However, once they sell transgenic seeds to Indian seed companies for use as initial varieties for creating new varieties, they cannot claim patent rights on subsequent seeds produced by farmers and breeders using essentially biological processes. For that, it must rely on the provisions of benefit sharing under the PPV&FR Act Here the patent right claims are upon the patented gene incorporated into seeds and not on the seeds per se. Hence PPVFR Act and benefit sharing with reference to this patent are irrelevant as described above.

The points that we as a concerned society need to deliberate are:

  1. How come a biotechnological gene product got invalidated under section 3(j) of IPA 2005?
  2. Once a patented gene is backcrossed into a seed or a plant variety, does the patent rights of the gene cease to exist and can the unauthorized use of a patented gene after its introgression into plants constitute infringement?

Finally, it is a very welcome relief to see that NSAI has conceded that “They (Monsanto) can have a patent on gene or gene sequences that have been synthesized in the laboratory and under patents act, they have the right to prevent anyone else from producing such transgenic seeds in a laboratory and selling the same”.

Image from here


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2950

Trending Articles