Chiron Corp. v. Abbott Laboratories

902 F. Supp. 1103, 95 Daily Journal DAR 13705, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13610, 1995 WL 550059
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedSeptember 14, 1995
DocketC-93-4380 MHP
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 902 F. Supp. 1103 (Chiron Corp. v. Abbott Laboratories) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chiron Corp. v. Abbott Laboratories, 902 F. Supp. 1103, 95 Daily Journal DAR 13705, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13610, 1995 WL 550059 (N.D. Cal. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

PATEL, District Judge.

Plaintiff Chiron Corporation (“Chiron”) brought this action against defendant Abbott Laboratories (“Abbott”), alleging infringement of U.S. Patent No. 5,156,949 (“’949 patent”), which pertains to an immunoassay test for the HIV virus. In its answer, Abbott alleges as two of its defenses inequitable conduct and prior invention. Now before the court are cross-motions for summary judgment on these two defenses.

Having considered the parties’ arguments and submissions, and for the reasons set forth below, the court enters the following memorandum and order. 1

BACKGROUND 2

After the first documented cases of what is now commonly called Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (“AIDS”) occurred in the United States in 1981, researchers identified the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (“HIV”) as its primary cause. 3 Antibody tests called “immunoassays” were developed thereafter, in order to detect the presence of antibodies to HIV in human blood and thus serve as a means of determining whether the blood is infected with the virus. This action arises out of the development and patenting of these immunoassays.

A. General Background on HIV

HIV is a virus, 4 and like other viruses it consists of genetic material and proteins, in the form of a string of nucleotides. Genetic material is the blueprint for all proteins and polypeptides (which are either full or partial *1107 proteins). Genetic material comes in two types: DNA and RNA. A gene is a set of nucleotides that contains the blueprint for a specific protein.

HIV’s genetic material is RNA. Although HIV’s RNA contains an entire blueprint for HIV, HIV lacks the ability to reproduce by itself. Thus, HIV must use the genetic material of a host cell (such as a human white blood cell) to reproduce itself. HIV enters the host cell, releases its RNA, and makes a DNA copy of its RNA. This DNA copy is then incorporated into and becomes part of the genetic material of the host cell, which begins to make copies of the HIV virus, spreading the infection and often killing the host cell.

When the human immune system detects the presence of HIV, it responds with HIV antibodies and defensive cells. Antibodies are unique molecules formed by the immune system in response to infection, and HIV-specific antibodies are formed as part of the immune system’s defensive efforts. These antibodies bind to the HIV virus, and the presence of these antibodies in a human blood sample indicates a current or prior encounter with the HIV virus or part of the virus.

B. Development of an HIV Immunoassay

Immunoassays can be used to detect viral antibodies, and an HIV immunoassay thus can detect the presence of HIV in human blood. Detection is made possible by the reaction or binding that occurs between viral peptides and virus-specific antibodies, a process known as “immunoreactivity.” The im-munoassays used to detect HIV can be constructed with either natural polypeptides or recombinant polypeptides. An HIV immunoassay using natural polypeptides can be constructed by growing live, fully intact HIV in large quantities, breaking the HIV into pieces, collecting the proteins, sticking them to a surface, and then washing blood over the surface. If HIV antibodies are present in the blood, they bind to the proteins and remain attached to them when the blood is washed from the surface. To detect the HIV antibodies bound to the HIV proteins, enzymes that change color or fluorescent markers that emit light can be used to attach to the antibodies.

The problem with a natural polypeptide immunoassay is that it requires growing large amounts of live, intact HIV, which exposes workers to risk of infection and requires expensive laboratory facilities. Thus, as research began in 1984 on creating an HIV immunoassay, scientists sought to use recombinant DNA technology to make proteins and partial proteins from HIV’s outer layer, called the envelope (“env”). Because scientists suspected that the env was immu-noreactive, the focus in 1984 was to identify DNA fragments that encoded env polypeptides. In late Spring 1984, a number of teams were fast at work trying to develop such a test, including projects at Chiron, DuPont, and a collaborative project between the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) and Centocor (“NIH/Centocor”). AH three teams attempted to create an env based recombinant DNA immunoassay.

To make an artificial env protein or polypeptide, large quantities of HIV genetic material are required. This material can be obtained by copying or cloning HIV’s genetic material and making many DNA copies. As scientists decipher the genetic material, they display it on maps showing where genes are located in relation to one another in the material. In order to locate the env region of HIV, scientists from both the NIH and Chiron studied maps of other viruses that they believed would be structurally similar to HIV. Based on study of those viruses, the scientists determined that the genes for HIV’s env likely would be in the right half of HIV’s genetic material, and began looking for it there.

To locate and isolate particular regions of genetic material, scientists make “restriction maps” by cutting DNA into progressively shorter fragments through a series of reagents called “restriction enzymes.” Restriction maps divide DNA into fragments that can be described and defined by “restriction sites.” The restriction enzymes recognize specific sequences of nucleotides and cut genetic material at those sites. Different restriction enzymes recognize different sites, a *1108 capability that makes it possible to isolate specific regions of genetic material accurately and repeatedly. Restriction sites are included on the restriction maps of the genetic material. While restriction maps enable scientists to identify and “cut” specific fragments of DNA, “sequencing” is more precise, and enables scientists to create a complete map of the exact order of the nucleotides comprising the DNA.

Between June 1984 and September 1984, the NIH ran sequencing reactions designed to map the nucleotide sequence of an HIV-clone called BH-8. The NIH collaborated with DuPont, Centocor, and Dana-Farber to map the nucleotide sequence of HIV DNA fragments in BH-8, as well as two other HIV clones, BH-10 and BH-5. DuPont received clone BH-10 from Dr. Flossie Wong-Staal of the NIH on or about July 6, 1984, and began generating nucleotide sequence data from BH-10 on or about July 18, 1984. By September 1, 1984, DuPont had run sequence reactions on DNA fragments that spanned what has now been determined to be the entire env region of BH-10’s DNA. DuPont obtained U.S. Patent No. 4,861,707, issued in 1989 based on a February 1987 application, which states that a Bglll-BamHI BH-10 DNA fragment encodes an immunoreactive polypeptide from the env region.

The NIH gave the BH-10 and BH-8 clones to Dr. Nancy Chang at Centocor on July 20, 1984, and also gave Centocor a restriction map for BH-10, BH-8, and BH-5. At some point after July 20,1984, Dr.

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902 F. Supp. 1103, 95 Daily Journal DAR 13705, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13610, 1995 WL 550059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chiron-corp-v-abbott-laboratories-cand-1995.