Today, the
technology licensing arm of The Sainsbury Laboratory and the John Innes Center
in the UK (PBL) granted a non-exclusive license to Dicer-substrate company Dicerna
for the therapeutic use of the recently emerged fundamental RNAi trigger IP,
the Baulcombe patent family. It follows
a similar, non-exclusive license granted last year to Alnylam and confirms the
importance of this patent family, especially for companies conducting research
and business in the US where patents from this family have issued.
Although the
terms, not just the financial ones, but also those regarding sublicensing rights were
not disclosed, I would think that the payments are more than token amounts and
that certain sublicensing rights are covered.
Notably, Dicerna has an important relationship with Japanese Pharma
Kyowa Hakko from which it announced in January that it would receive a $5M milestone payment. This could be
construed to have infringed the patents at issue and provided the final motivation for the license.
Given that
the first therapeutic license was given to Alnylam which focuses on 20-23mer
RNAi triggers and the second one to Dicerna which works on 26-29mers, it is
interesting to speculate whether PBL aims to increase the attractiveness (and
cost) of the non-exclusive license by providing exclusivities regarding specific RNAi trigger structures. This
question is an important one for companies like Silence Therapeutics as they
might be shut out from the 20-30 base-pair range should this be the case.
Coming Up: TKM-PLK1 phase I data presentation by
Tekmira at AACR.
Eagerly Await Your Blog re:
ReplyDelete"Coming Up: TKM-PLK1 phase I data presentation by Tekmira at AACR."