Application of Frank Peter Doyle, John Herbert Charles Nayler and George Newbolt Rolinson

327 F.2d 513, 51 C.C.P.A. 993, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 421, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 478
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7098
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 327 F.2d 513 (Application of Frank Peter Doyle, John Herbert Charles Nayler and George Newbolt Rolinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Frank Peter Doyle, John Herbert Charles Nayler and George Newbolt Rolinson, 327 F.2d 513, 51 C.C.P.A. 993, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 421, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 478 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 2 and 4, the only remaining claims in appellants’ application serial No. 833,680, filed August 14, 1959 for SUBSTANCES PRODUCED FROM PENICILLIN-PRODUCING MOULDS.

2. 6-Aminopenicillanie 1 acid having the structural formula

which is capable of reacting with phenylacetyl chloride to produce benzylpenicillin, and which gives a negative Bratten-Marshall test and a negative ninhydrin test.

4. Solid, nonhygroscopic 6-ami-nopenieillanic acid having the structural formula

and melting at about 209-210° C.

*514 The application discloses that 6-APA is used in preparing antibiotic substances.

The references relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Kuhne — Pharmazie, Vol. I, pages 200-201 (1946)
Sakaguchi et al. — J.Agri.Chem.Soc.
(Japan), Vol. 23, page 411 (1950) Arnstein et al. — Biochem J., Vol. 67, pages 180-187 (1957)
Hockenhull et al. — Arch.Biochem., Vol. 23, pages 160-161 * (1949)

The Kuhne article discloses that a more complete investigation of the material known as penicillin A has revealed that it is not a simple substance but consists of several different penicillins, all of which have a common skeleton and differ only by a side chain always located in the same position. Penicillin G, one of such penicillins, is depicted as having the following structural formula:

Kuhne indicates that although the skeleton portion of penicillin G had not been named it has been proposed to “include the keto-C atom in the side chain, and to refer to the linkage of this C-atom to the nitrogen as a peptide linkage, so that the skeleton would be that of an amine of the following structure:

The Sakaguchi et al. publication discloses a new enzyme, penicillin-amidase, which splits penicillin G. The authors indicate that from the reaction mixture of penicillin G and penicillin-amidase, “phenyl acetic acid and a substance which we presume ‘peniein’ have been isolated, the latter substance being in the form of hygroscopic crystalline needles giving m. p. 158-159°C. This substance, which itself does not give ninhydrin reaction, 2 3 develops an intense blue violet coloration *515 by ninhydrin reagent after it was acted with [upon by] penicillinase.” “Peni-cin” is depicted as having the formula:

Arnstein et al. disclose suggested pathways of penicillin biosynthesis. Set forth as a possible reaction mechanism is a process which starts with cysteinylvaline, the final step in the penicillin biosynthe-sis being postulated as consisting of the acylation of a compound having the structural formula:

The examiner rejected claims 2 and 4 as “lacking invention” over Kuhne or Sakaguchi et al. or Arnstein et al., all of which wei*e considered to “teach the concept of 6-aminopenicillanic acid which is the compound that is instantly being claimed.” The examiner stated that the presence of 6-APA could be readily appreciated by one skilled in the art in view of the cited references. The patentability of isolating 6-APA from the fermentation liquor obtained in the biosynthesis of penicillins was said by the examiner to have been recognized by the Patent Office since appellants’ parent application, serial No. 750,057, of the instant application serial No. 833,680 4 has matured into US patent No. 2,941,995 and the claims of the parent application “are directed to a method of recovering the 6-aminopeni-cillanie acid from an aqueous solution.”

In affirming the examiner's rejection the board stated:

“In each of these publications [Sakaguchi et al., Kuhne and Arn-stein et al.] the compound claimed was described by its structural formula which is the means most commonly used by chemists to accurately describe an organic chemical. From the publications a chemist would be informed of, and understand the exact nature of the claimed compound and its relationship to valuable compounds of the prior art.”

Appellants contend that they have produced a compound which was not available before and have made possible “new penicillins both for commercial exploitation and for extensive research work.” They urge that they were the first to produce, isolate and purify solid 6-APA and to determine its properties. It is argued that the prior art had depicted the structural formula of 6-APA, not to describe an alleged existing compound, but rather as a possible merely theoretical' intermediate which might exist along a suggested pathway of reaction in penicillin biosynthesis; as a non-existent, purely theoretical skeleton to form the basis for a new system of penicillin nomenclature; and as a “presumed” structural formula for a material isolated from the reaction mass after enzymatic action on penicillin, but not having the physical properties of 6-APA.

We think the issue facing this court is whether the compound as recited in the appealed claims is described in, or obvious from, the cited art. To determine that question, a careful analysis of appellants’ application is necessary.

According to the application, appellants have found that substances having antibiotic activity can be obtained by reacting,with a suitable chemical reagent, the *516 fermentation liquor obtained by growing a penicillin-producing mould, such as penicillium chrysogenum.

The application discloses that the fermentation liquor contains a compound of the structural formula:

which “we term 6-aminopenicillanic acid following the nomenclature adopted by other workers in analogous fields.” Appellants state that this 6-APA is a non-hygroscopic compound which in a substantially pure form has a melting point of 209 to 210°C. and gives the following analysis: carbon 44.6 % ; hydrogen 5.-7%; nitrogen 13.1% ; and sulfur 14.T%.. Compared with this analysis they point out that C8H12O3N2S, the empirical formula of 6-APA, requirescarbon 44.4%; hydrogen 5.6% ; nitrogen 13.0% and sulfur 14.8%. The compound 6-APA is stated to give a negative Bratten-Marshall test and a negative ninhydrin test and to be capable of reacting with phenylacetyl chloride to produce benzyl-penicillin.

Appellants state in their application that the procedure to be followed in preparing antibiotic substances from 6-APA depends largely upon the extent to which the 6-APA has itself been purified. Thus, it is said that 6-APA may be used in three different states of purification: (1) isolated 6-APA, (2) 6-APA concentrate and (3) the dilute fermentation brew containing 6-APA. 6-APA concentrate is described as a clarified fermentation liquor which has been subjected to an initial concentration procedure and from which the natural peni-cillins have been substantially removed by solvent extraction at pH 2 to 3.

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327 F.2d 513, 51 C.C.P.A. 993, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 421, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-frank-peter-doyle-john-herbert-charles-nayler-and-george-ccpa-1964.