(21Aug14) Yesterday, I mistakenly stated that Alnylam wrongfully concluded that Dicerna was infringing on a newly issued Tuschl patent. Following comments in the comment section below, it came to my attention that indeed there was a claim that I missed, claim 81 (and some contingent claims), that covers RNAi triggers of 25 base-pairs as follows:
81. An isolated double-stranded RNA molecule, comprising:
(i) a sense strand and an antisense strand that form a double-stranded region of up to 25
base pairs, said sense strand having an identity in the double-stranded region of at least 85
percent to a target RNA molecule; and
(ii) at least one strand having a single-stranded 3’-overhang, wherein said 3’-overhang
has been stabilized against degradation; and
(iii) at least one nucleotide analogue,
wherein said RNA molecule is capable of target-specific RNA interference.
Note that Dicerna's RNAi triggers make use of the 2'-O-methyl modification which sometimes is found in the 3' overhang and can also have stabilizing activity. Taken together, this claim indeed questions Dicerna's RNAi triggers, and although I would expect vigorous debate around whether 25 base-pairs are covered by the patent's description requirements should it come to a patent litigation, the assumption is that Alnylam's new patent rightfully questions many, if not most of the RNAi triggers used by Dicerna currently.
Since I'm at it, the new patent also comes awfully close to the asymmetric RNAi trigger designs by RXi Pharmaceuticals and others (asiRNAs). RXi e.g. uses dsRNA lengths of below 15bp with the guide strand having a long 3' overhang. I am a bit surprised that Alnylam got just enough extension both below and above their traditional 19-23bp stronghold to start overlapping with some asiRNA and Dicer-substrate designs.
Regardless, I stand by my point that Alnylam has re-invigorated their patent-related press releases in order to explain the valuation gap to its peers in the public markets. The original blog entry follows here:
This morning,
Alnylam greeted the competition with another
IP-related press release. It wrongly
claims that a patent it just obtained covers competing technologies. This suggests that it either lacks an understanding of RNA technology basics or that it is afraid that
the market will come to understand that the valuation difference to its peers has no basis in either a commercially more attractive clinical pipeline, a superior patent estate, or simply better technology.
Dicerna’s Dicer-substrate technology not in 14-24bp range
Today’s press release concerns US patent application
13/725262 which is part of the Tuschl patent estate covering certain RNAi
triggers with 3’ overhangs. Although the
patent has not finally been published, based on the latest submitted claim set,
the RNAi trigger covered by the main claim should comprise the following
features:
a)
a dsRNA length of 14-24 base-pair;
b)
at least 1 3’ overhang;
c)
at least one ‘nucleotide analogue’;
d)
and the dsRNA is non-enzymatically processed.
Clearly,
in citing the Rose et al. and another paper by
Dicerna (actually their scientific founders from the Rossi lab at the City of
Hope) as proof of Dicerna’s infringement, Alnylam hopes that its investor and
business development audience does not actually read scientific papers.
‘Specifically, the newly
allowed patent application broadly covers small interfering RNA
("siRNA") molecules of various designs, including so-called
"dicer substrate" RNAi triggers (Amarzguioui et al., Nat Protoc.2006;1(2):508-17; Rose et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 2005 Jul 26;33(13):4140-56)…’
Otherwise, it would quickly become apparent that Dicerna’s
version of RNAi triggers have a dsRNA length of 25 base-pairs and, well, are
enzymatically processed: Dicer
substrates!
[Note: in the original entry I mistakenly said Dicerna's triggers were 27 base-pairs; to be precise, they are 25/27 designs with 25 base-pairs and a 2 nucleotide 3' overhang on the guide.]
So as the actual clinical pipelines of Arrowhead Research
and Tekmira are about to look more attractive in terms of commercial value (HBV alone),
look forward to more Alnylam patent-related press releases to help the market understand
why Alnylam has a market cap of $5 Billion and its competition only about 1/10th
of that.
PS: the claim that
usiRNAs infringe on this and other patents by Alnylam largely depends on the
definition of ‘nucleoside analogue’ and ‘modified nucleotides’.
PPS: this patent does not change Alnylam's position as very similar ones related to 3' overhangs have already issued. However, by slicing and dicing a patent application, it is possible to get issued a set of highly similar patents which, of course, is great fodder for the PR department.