Biotech中国Court CasesInvalidationPharma
2018年11月23日

No % homology? How to craft allowable claim scope around sequences to comply with China’s strict written description requirements

Since 2010, the Patent Re-examination Board (PRB) has published the top 10 patent invalidation cases of the year in April of each year. The selection criteria are high social concern, significant impact on the related industry, or involve difficult legal issues and important examination criteria. Below is one of the top 10 cases that discusses what is considered allowable claim scope around sequences.

It is well known that China has strict requirements when it comes to adequate written description and support in the specification. Chinese Patent Law Article 26(4) says that “all claims must be supported by the description and shall define the extent of the patent protection sought for in a clear and concise manner.”

In the unpredictable arts, such as chemistry and biology, the breadth of protection is highly dependent on the number and scope of the specific examples in the specification. The resultant narrow claims that are often issued in China are easy to design-around, thus making Chinese patents less attractive for biotech inventions with few actual examples.

Invalidation Request: Novozymes CN98813338.5

We summarize a Top 10 IP Cases of 2016 regarding an invalidation request of Novozymes’ Chinese invention patent (CN98813338.5) by Jiangsu Boli Biological Products Co. Ltd. Novozyme’s patent relates to an isolated glucoamylase with improved thermal stability and many uses, such as converting starch into glucose. The claims were written in a way that included a functional limitation (having “glucoamylase activity”) plus a scope defined in one or more of the following ways: “comprising” a SEQ ID, consisting of a SEQ ID plus 99% homology, and source, e.g., derived from a particular strain.

For support, the specification described two sequences, SEQ ID NO: 7 and 14, both of which were isolated enzymes from a strain of the filamentous fungus T. emersonii that had glucoamylase activity.

The court rejected claims that merely defined the enzyme using either open-ended “comprising” language or percent homology language, saying the scope was too open-ended and not supported by the examples. However, the court allowed claims that further narrowed the claim to cover sequences made by a particular strain. The court reasoned that only a very narrow set of sequences could possibly be made from the strain, and thus the limitation was adequately supported by the two examples.

Practice Points

As a practice point, consider multiple ways of defining your invention (e.g., “source” was the winner here, but the possibilities depend on the situation). There are many creative ways to define your invention: the more examples showing the “reasonable, predictable scope” of the active species, the better. Ideally, focus on describing how the function is linked to the structure or other properties (e.g., structural and functional domains of a polypeptide, source, method of preparation, physicochemical properties, etc.).

Sources: lungtin unitalen

Jennifer Che, J.D. is a US Patent Attorney and Vice President and Partner at Eagle IP, a Boutique Patent Firm with offices in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Macau.

[email protected]

This article is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice or a legal opinion on a specific set of facts.

其他文章

China’s Supreme People’s Court (SPC) Hands Down First Patent Linkage Appeal Decision

2022年9月21日
China has been implementing a plethora of new laws and measures that are particularly favorable to drug companies, such as patent term extension and patent linkage.  Details of the new implementation measures for patent linkage (technically “early dispute resolution mechanisms for drug patents”) came into effect on July 4, 2021. At around the same time, […]

China Proposes New Examination Guidelines for Utility Models

2022年11月24日
The Utility Model (UM) in China has always been a popular choice for patent filing due to its relatively low cost and speed of prosecution. The UM prosecution only includes a preliminary examination, which is essentially a mini (stripped down) version of an invention application’s substantive examination.[1] With the simplified examination process, UMs are typically […]

Do Promotional Marketing Materials Constitute an “Offer for Sale” under Chinese Patent Law? Bayer IP GmbH v. Nanjing Hang Seng Pharmaceutical

2023年12月12日
Bayer's blockbuster drug Rivaroxaban has seen its share of patent litigations in China, several of which are big enough to be listed as Top 10 IP cases or 50 Representative IP cases. We summarized an invalidation case back in 2020 where all of Bayer’s claims directed towards the compound were upheld. Recently, another Rivaroxaban case […]

Can I transfer priority rights in China without the consent of other applicants? Insights from the Broad Institute’s CRISPR patent

2025年2月4日
The high-profile disputes surrounding an important CRISPR patent belonging to The Broad Institute, MIT and Harvard (hereinafter “the proprietors”) has attracted a lot of attention in recent years, particularly regarding the validity of priority rights that were challenged worldwide. In Europe, the patent was famously revoked by the European Patent Office (hereinafter “EPO”) due to […]

我们的过去活动

Top crossarrow-right