MEMORANDUM OPINION
Presently before the Court are Defendants’ motions to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Defendants argue that the patents-in-suit are directed toward unpatentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. The Court agrees that claim 1 of United States Patent No. 5,612,179 (“the '179 patent”) imper-missibly claims a natural phenomenon and, therefore, grants Defendants’ motions with regard to this claim. With respect to any remaining asserted claims, the Court denies the motions without prejudice to renew.
I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On May 25, 2011, Genetic Technologies Ltd. (“GTG” or “Plaintiff’) filed a patent
On March 29, 2012, GTG filed its First Amended Complaint in this District against BMS, alleging infringement of the '179 patent as well as United States Patent No. 5,851,762 (“the '762 patent”) (collectively, “the patents-in-suit”). (C.A. No. 12-394 D.I. 2) On that same day, GTG filed its First Amended Complaint in this District against Merial, again alleging infringement of the '179 patent.
Generally, the '179 patent relates to a method for detecting alleles of a genetic locus and haplotypes by amplifying genomic DNA with a primer pair spanning a non-coding sequence in genetic linkage with the allele to be detected. The '762 patent generally relates to a genomic mapping method based on the ability to identify haplotypes of individuals through analysis of non-coding region sequence variation patterns.
On February 3, 2014, BMS and Merial filed motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim on the basis that the patents-in-suit are directed to patent ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. (C.A. No. 12-394 D.I. 35; C.A. No. 12-396 D.I. 52) The parties completed briefing on March 17, 2014. (C.A. No. 12-394 D.I. 36, 43, 48, 49; C.A. No. 12-396 D.I. 58, 63, 64
II. BACKGROUND
The patented technology relates to deox-yribonucleic acid (“DNA”). The building blocks of DNA, known as “nucleotides,” consist of four bases: adenine (“A”), cytosine (“C”), guanine (“G”), and thymine (“T”). (Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) at ¶ 7) The nucleotides form pairs with one another — G pairs with C and T pairs with A — in order to form the
Early efforts at determining genetic differences among individuals focused on directly analyzing the coding region of genes (exons) to detect alleles. (SAC at ¶ 9) Although variations were also known to exist in non-coding DNA, these non-coding regions (introns) were largely dismissed as irrelevant, garnering the epithet “junk DNA.” (Id. at ¶ 15)
Through the work of a company called Genetype AG and Dr. Malcolm Simons, it was discovered that there can be a correlation between variations in non-coding in-trons and coding region alleles. (Id. at ¶ 16) Through what is referred to as meiosis, duplicate chromosomes exchange stretches of DNA (in a process called chromosomal crossover), resulting in shuffled chromosomes. (Id. at ¶ 11) Certain regions of each chromosome, however, tend to be inherited together with only rare shuffling. (Id.) These stretches are said to be linked or in “linkage disequilibrium.”
The Amended Complaint depicts a hypothetical partial genomic DNA sequence (shown below) illustrating this linkage phenomenon. Arrows 1, 2, 3, and 4 each represent a SNP at four sites in the sequence:
[[Image here]]
(Id. at ¶¶ 13, 17) SNPs 1 and 4 are in non-coding regions, while SNPs 2 and 3 are in coding regions (both in the first exon). (Id.) As the Amended Complaint
Throughout a genome, various groups of SNPs are in linkage disequilibrium and, thus, exhibit the non-coding/coding correlations. (Id. at ¶ 19) Details of each correlation can vary and, in some instances, no correlation exists. (Id.)
Prior to the patents-in-suit, it was common for scientists studying DNA to “amplify” the portion of interest by making( additional copies to allow for analysis. ('179 patent at 2:45-60, 3:5-12, 3:39-45, 5:55-6:3, 12:53-65) A common method for amplifying DNA was “polymerase chain reaction,” also known as “PCR.” ('179 patent at 2:45-60, 3:5-12; SAC at ¶ 25) In PCR generally, a pair of short, man-made strands of DNA, called a “primer pair,” which each match a specific short nucleotide sequence along complimentary strands of DNA, can be used in conjunction with an enzyme known as a “polymerase” to create copies of particular stretches of the DNA sequence. (See '179 patent at 2:45-60, 3:5-12, 5:66-6:3, 6:10-13; SAC at ¶¶ 23-24) Also in the prior art was another well-established technique for analyzing amplified DNA: restriction fragment length polymorphism (“RFLP”) pattern. ('179 patent at 1:50-53)
III. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Motion to Dismiss
In order to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
“In deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, a court must consider only the complaint, exhibits attached-to the complaint, matters of public record, as well as undisputedly authentic documents if the complainant’s claims are based upon these documents.” Mayer v. Belichick,
The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has stated that to grant dismissal of a patent infringement suit at the pleading stage for lack of patentable subject matter, “the only plausible reading of the patent must be that there is clear and
Nevertheless, the Court finds the reasoning in Ultramercial at least persuasive here insofar as it concerns the procedural mechanics of a § 101 challenge at the 12(b)(6) stage — particularly the significant burden on a movant given the limited factual record, if any, before the Court. In addition, Ultramercial is now pending on remand before the Federal Circuit, putting the substantive § 101 question in light of Alice before that Court, which may well respond by reinstating the “only plausible reading” standard for § 101 challenges arising at the pleading stage under Rule 12(b)(6). Finally, while the Federal Circuit made clear in Ultramercial that it will be “rare” that patent ineligibility is evident at- the pleading stage such that a patent suit can be dismissed on this basis, see
IY. DISCUSSION
A claim is unpatentable if it merely informs a relevant audience about certain laws of nature, even newly-discovered ones, and any additional steps collectively consist only of well-understood, routine, conventional activity already engaged in by the scientific community. See Mayo Collaborative Servs. v. Prometheus Labs., Inc., 566 U.S. —,
A. Patentable Subject Matter
First, the Court discusses the legal standards applicable to the issue of patentable subject matter. Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 101, an applicant may obtain a patent on a new and useful (1) “process,” (2) “machine,” (3) “manufacture,” or (4) “composition of matter,” or “any new and useful improvement thereof.” Although § 101 generally encompasses “anything under the sun that is made by man,” “laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas” are not patentable. Diamond v. Diehr,
In discussing this distinction, the Supreme Court has recently reiterated that courts are to apply the two-step framework set out in Mayo Collaborative Servs. v. Prometheus Labs., Inc. A court first determines “whether the claims at issue are directed to one of those patent-ineligible concepts.” Alice,
In keeping with these principles, “ ‘[phenomena of nature, though just discovered, mental processes, and abstract intellectual concepts are not patentable, as they are the basic tools of scientific and technological work.’ ” Mayo,
When the steps of the claim “must be taken in order to apply the [natural] laws in question,” the claim is not necessarily anything more than a dictate to apply the law of nature. Mayo,
B. The Claim Concerns a Process
The present invention claims methods for amplifying and analyzing correlations between different regions of a DNA sequence. It is undisputed that the claimed invention is a “process” (as opposed to a machine, manufacture, or composition of matter). See Accenture Global Servs., GmbH v. Guidewire Software, Inc.,
C. The Claim Recites a Natural Phenomenon
The correlations between variations in non-coding regions of DNA— formerly known as “junk DNA” — and variations in coding regions of DNA— specifically, alleles — are natural phenomena. A correlation that preexists in the human body is an unpatentable phenomenon. See, e.g., Lab. Corp. of Am. Holdings v. Metabolite Labs., Inc.,
Here, the correlations involved in claim 1 preexist in the human body. More specifically, the correlations involve a form of “linkage disequilibrium” where (i) variations in the non-coding region DNA sequence are genetically linked to (ii) the presence of alleles in the coding regions. The variations, known as polymorphisms, are naturally occurring in the DNA sequence. The linkage is a result of entirely natural processes in which these sequences are inherited as a block.
Plaintiff contends these correlations are not a natural phenomenon or law because any given genetic linkage is not universal, is “not present in all species or even amongst other individuals of a particular species,” and “may not have existed in the past and may not exist in the future” due to evolutionary inherency. (SAC at ¶ 21) Plaintiff insists that a natural phenomenon must be an immutable, scientific truth. The Court disagrees. Plaintiff cites no authority for so broad a proposition. Moreover, Plaintiffs position is inconsistent with the reasoning of Mayo, which acknowledges that a natural phenomenon may vary across organisms. See
Therefore, just as the relationship at issue in Mayo was entirely a consequence of the body’s natural processes for metabolizing thiopurine, so too is the correlation here (between variations in the non-coding regions and allele presence in the coding regions) a consequence of the naturally occurring linkages in the DNA sequence. See also Genetic Techs. Ltd. v. Agilent Techs., Inc.,
D. The Claim’s Additional Steps Do Not Give Rise to an “Inventive Concept”
Having determined that claim 1 recites a process focused on a natural law, the Court must now determine whether the additional steps in the claim are sufficient to satisfy patent eligibility. Specifically, “do the patent claims add enough to their statements of the correlations to allow the, processes they describe to qualify as patent-eligible processes that apply natural laws?” Mayo,
When the newly discovered DNA correlations are set aside and the additional steps are examined, claim 1 of the '179
1. '179 patent — Claim 1
The Court concludes the only plausible reading of claim 1 of the '179 patent is that its additional steps, which consist only of routine and conventional techniques, fail to give rise to an “inventive concept,” such that when, taken as a whole, the claim does not provide meaningful limitations that restrict the natural correlation to an application.
In Mayo, the inventor claimed a method of optimizing therapeutic efficacy for treatment of .an immune-mediated gastrointestinal disorder, comprising: “(a) administering a drug providing 6-thiogua-nine to a subject having said immune-mediated gastrointestinal disorder” and “(b) determining the level of 6-thiogua-nine in said subject having said immune-mediated gastrointestinal disorder.” Mayo,
The Court held that the “administering” step simply referred to the relevant audience (e.g., doctors using those drugs to treat patients), the “determining” step “tells doctors- to engage in well-understood, routine, conventional activity previously engaged in by scientists who work in the field,” and the “wherein” steps simply tell a doctor in greater detail about the natural law itself. Id. at 1297-98. The Court concluded the claims “inform a relevant audience about certain laws of nature; any additional steps consist of well-understood, routine, conventional activity already engaged in by the scientific community; and those steps, when viewed as a whole, add nothing significant beyond the sum of their parts taken separately.” Id. Thus, the steps were “not sufficient to transform unpatentable natural correlations into patentable applications.” Id.
Here, likewise, the steps of claim 1 of the '179 patent add nothing more to the natural linkage correlation than routine ac
A method for detection of at least one coding region allele of a multi-allelic genetic locus comprising:
a) amplifying genomic DNA with a primer pair that spans a non-coding region sequence, said primer pair defining a DNA sequence which is in genetic linkage with said genetic locus and contains a sufficient number of non-coding region sequence nucleotides to produce an amplified DNA sequence characteristic of said allele; and
b) analyzing the amplified DNA sequence to detect the allele.
('179 patent at 59:57-67) (emphasis added) The additional steps consist of the (i) “amplifying” and (ii) “analyzing” limitations, along with (iii) a descriptive limitation about what kind of DNA sequence the primer pair in the amplifying step delineates.
As with the “administering” and. “determining” steps in Mayo, the “amplifying” .step here tells scientists to engage in “well-understood, routine, conventional activity previously engaged in” by those in the field. Mayo,
In GTG’s view, the claims are “unconventional methods” because they teach amplifying genomic DNA with a primer pair that spans an intron sequence and defines a DNA sequence in genetic linkage with an allele to be detected. (D.I. 43 at 4) (emphasis added) In its Second Amended Complaint, GTG concedes “PCR amplification was known” but contends “no one had used a primer pair to amplify non-coding DNA to define a DNA sequence in genetic linkage with a coding region allele in order to detect that allele.” '(SAC at ¶ 25; see also Tr. at 46 (conceding primers, which Plaintiff likens to “scissors,” are in prior art, but arguing “the use of scissors to cut a particular region of DNA ... is new”)) Therefore, GTG’s argument is that directing conventional amplification techniques to discern a newfound natural correlation — linkage disequilibrium between non-coding sequences and alleles — constitutes an “unconventional” amplification technique for detecting those alleles.
GTG fails to separate the unpatentable natural law from the purportedly unconventional “amplifying” technique. Mayo sets out that when “the steps in the claimed processes {apart from the natural laws themselves) involve well-understood, routine, conventional activity previously engaged in by researchers in the field,” the subject matter is ineligible without
GTG urges the Court to follow Genetic Techs. Ltd. v. Agilent Techs., Inc.,
To use the Agilent’s court’s statements in the way GTG suggests here would risk collapsing the natural law into the additional steps in the same manner discussed (and rejected) above. Mayo requires that the additional steps be viewed apart from the natural law. Otherwise, whenever a natural law is newly discovered, any “additional step” — no matter how routine or conventional in that field — could be tacked onto it and become patent eligible by virtue of the fact it takes advantage of the naturally occurring phenomenon. See Mayo,
The “said primer pair” limitation merely recites the natural phenomenon itself — the linkage correlation — -just as the “wherein” steps in Mayo recited the characteristics of the metabolite correlations. See id. at 1297 (“[T]hese clauses tell the relevant audience about the laws while trusting them to use those laws appropriately, where they are relevant to their decision[-]making (rather like Einstein telling linear accelerator operators about his basic law and then trusting them to use it where relevant).”). The primer pair must define a DNA sequence that has enough non-coding region sequence nucleotides in “genetic linkage” with the allele such that when amplified, the sequence is characteristic of the allele. In short, the DNA sequence must contain the correlation. The limitation sets forth a condition that is inherently required in order to implement the natural law and, therefore, does nothing to impart an “inventive concept.”
Finally, the “analyzing” step is akin to the “determining” step in Mayo, which told the physician to determine the level of the relevant metabolites in the blood “through whatever process the doctor or the laboratory wishes to use.” Id. at 1297-98. Here, the relevant audience is simply instructed to analyze the amplified DNA sequence to detect the allele through whatever method the scientist chooses, a step which does not meaningfully limit the claim. See also Agilent,
When viewed as “an ordered combination,” the “amplifying,” “primer pair defining,” and “analyzing” steps together do not alter the outcome here. Indeed, as with the steps in Mayo, the “steps as an ordered combination add[] nothing to the laws of nature that is not already present when .the steps are considered separately.” Mayo,
2. '762 Patent
In light of the limited analysis the parties provided in their briefing and during oral argument on the patent eligibility of the '762 patent — which includes ten steps
E. Machine or Transformation Test
Plaintiff contends that claim 1 of the '179 patent is patent eligible because it satisfies the machine or transformation test in three ways. First, in GTG’s view, the claims require amplification, which “must be performed with a machine.” Second, primers are tools, and therefore the method claims use “machines.” Finally, the output of amplification is man-made DNA, which also makes the claims transforma-tive. Plaintiffs arguments are unpersuasive.
The “machine or transformation test” is “not a definitive test of patent eligibility, but only an important and useful clue.” Mayo,
With regard to GTG’s argument that the claims require use of a machine to amplify the DNA, the asserted claims do not tie amplification to a “particular machine” and, therefore, do not meet the machine or transformation test on these grounds. See Bilski
GTG devotes a single line of its brief to its second argument that the claims are also tied to a machine, and thus patentable, because the well-known primers are a man-made tool that is used to selectively amplify DNA. Even if primers could be characterized as machines, GTG’s argument cannot prevail. Carried to its logical conclusion, accepting GTG’s position would mean that any time a claim covering a natural law also employs a well-known, routine, or conventional man-made implement — such as a basic thermometer to take a patient’s temperature, a conventional syringe to introduce a known drug, or a primer for beginning DNA amplification— this machine would confer patentability. Such a result would eviscerate the holding in Mayo regarding the ineligibility of “conventional or routine” steps. Relatedly, such a conventional machine would always
Plaintiffs third argument, by which it contends that amplified DNA is “man-made,” relies chiefly on Plaintiffs interpretation of the Supreme Court’s decision in Myriad regarding cDNA. According to GTG, Myriad stands for the proposition that “man-made DNA that is molecularly different from naturally occurring DNA is patent eligible in of itself;” based on this reading, GTG contends that because “amplified DNA is molecularly distinct and distinguishable from naturally occurring DNA from which it was derived,” it, too, is “man-made.” (D.I. 43 at 22) This, in GTG’s view, makes its methods using amplified DNA patent eligible: “once one has determined that a claimed composition of matter is patent-eligible subject matter, applying various known types of procedures to it is not merely applying conventional steps.” See AMP,
Plaintiff misreads Myriad. First, Myriad did not address the broad category of “man-made DNA” GTG describes here; nor did it establish such a sweeping principle of eligibility. Instead, in Myriad, the Supreme Court specifically addressed the patent eligibility of (i) “isolated native DNA,” which it found ineligible, and (ii) “cDNA,” which it held was eligible on the basis that it was a synthesized DNA sequence from which the non-coding regions had been removed and, thus, did not occur in nature. See
GTG’s attempt to liken amplified DNA to cDNA contradicts the reasoning of Myriad and related Federal Circuit precedent, which focus on what the claims recite rather than unclaimed chemical differences identified post-hoc during litigation. GTG concedes that “like cDNA, the nucleotide sequence of amplified DNA is dictated by the naturally occurring DNA,” but contends “the process of amplification does not copy the methylation status of the DNA and incorporates cytosines into the final product instead of the naturally occurring 5-methylcytosines.” (D.I. 43 at 22; see also SAC at ¶ 27) However the Supreme Court and Federal Circuit analy-ses lead to the conclusion that changing a DNA molecule’s “methylation” and removing it from its context in the genome do not confer patent eligibility if the claim is directed to the genetic sequence — i.e., the genetic information — rather than the chemical composition of the physical DNA molecule.
In Myriad, before ruling on the cDNA claims, the Court held Myriad’s composition claims over the isolated native DNA sequence containing the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes were not patent eligible, despite the fact that “isolating DNA from the human genome severs chemical bonds and thereby creates a nonnaturally occurring molecule.” Myriad,
Similarly, in AMP, in which the Federal Circuit analyzed the eligibility of the method claims that were not subject to review in Myriad, the Federal Circuit based its determination on what the claims recited rather than on unclaimed differences in chemical composition. See AMP,
Most recently, in In re Roslin Inst. (Edinburgh),
Here, claim 1 is undisputedly directed to genetic information. More precisely, the claim' recites a method for detecting a coding region allele using genomic DNA, specifically a naturally occurring non-coding region sequence, which is amplified and analyzed. The claim is focused on the information in that genetic sequence, and the “linkage disequilibrium” between variations in the non-coding region sequence and variations in the coding region sequence, not the chemical structure of the molecule. It is undisputed that the genetic information in the amplified sequence is the same — nucleotide after nucleotide, in the same order — as the native DNA sequence. {See D.I. 43 at 22) (“[T]he nucleotide sequence of amplified DNA is dictated by the naturally occurring DNA.”) Therefore, although amplification is carried out in a laboratory by a human, it is a replication of the native DNA sequence, resulting in a mirror image of the naturally-occurring genetic information. The claims do not depend on the altered methylation. The chemical changes that may indeed occur during amplification are unrelated to the claimed method and, therefore, do not impose a meaningful limitation.
The Court concludes, therefore, that the machine or transformation test is not satisfied, nor does it provide a basis for finding claim 1 here is meaningfully limited.
F. Defendants’ Motions Are Not Premature
1. Factual Disputes
GTG suggests there are “numerous factual issues” underlying Defendants’ motions but fails to explain how any factual dispute prevents Defendants from satisfying their (albeit heavy) burden. An alleged infringer raising an invalidity defense bears the burden of proving invalidity by clear and convincing evidence. See Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Ltd. P’ship, — U.S. —,
2. Claim Construction
GTG also contends that claim construction is necessary before the Court can determine patent eligibility. The Court disagrees. GTG has identified no claim term in dispute that could alter the Court’s conclusions. Also, the Court finds no factual disputes underlying the scope of the claims that prevent it from finding Defendants have met their high burden on the issue of ineligibility. As discussed above, the only plausible reading of the claims is that there is clear and convincing evidence that they cover only ineligible natural correlations between non-coding sequences and alleles. Defendants’ motion, therefore, is not premature.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Court finds claim 1 of the '179 patent recites only ineligible subject matter under § 101. Defendants’ motions to dismiss will be granted with respect to this claim. The Court will require further input from the parties before it can determine whether all of the other asserted claims of the patents-in-suit are invalid, if this question even remains in dispute.
An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER
At Wilmington this 30th day of October, 2014,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1. Bristol-Myers Squibb Company and Merial LLC’s Motions to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim (C.A. No. 12-394 D.I. 35; C.A. No. 12-396 D.I. 52) are GRANTED with regard to claim 1 of the '179 patent and DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE in all other respects.
2. The parties shall submit a joint status report, no later than November 6, 2014, advising the Court as to their proposal^) for how these cases should proceed, including whether Defendants intend to renew their challenges to the validity of additional claims of the '179 patent and/or the claims of the '762 patent; and, if so, when and how these challenges to validity should be addressed by the Court, in light of today’s ruling.
Notes
.GTG also alleged infringement of the '179 patent against Pfizer, Inc. (“Pfizer”) (C.A. No. 12-395 D.I. 2), Natera Inc. ("Natera”) (C.A. No. 12-1737 D.I. 1), and Histogenetics LLC ('•'Histogenetics”) (C.A. No. 12-1738 D.I. 1). Histogenetics filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings on the basis of § 101 (C.A. No. 12-1738 D.I. 51), but the case was dismissed on August 15, 2014 (C.A. No. 12-1738 D.I. 74). The action involving Natera has been transferred to the Northern District of California. (C.A. No. 12-1737 D.I. 42) Natera and Pfizer have not joined the pending motions. GTG also alleged infringement against Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings, Laboratory Corporation of America, and 23and-Me Inc. of United States Patent No. 7,615,342 (“the '342 patent”). (C.A. No. 12-1736 D.I. 1) These defendants filed a motion to dismiss on the basis of § 101 as well (C.A. No. 12-1736 D.I. 9), which was referred to Magistrate Judge Christopher J. Burke (C.A. No. 12-1736 D.I. 21). On September 3, 2014, Judge Burke recommended granting the motion. (C.A. No. 12-1736 D.I. 31) The case was dismissed on September 9, 2014. (C.A. No. 12-1736 D.I. 32)
. For simplicity, in the remainder of this Opinion the Court refers to the “D.I.” number in C.A. No. 12-394, unless otherwise indicated.
. For purposes of evaluating the pending motions, it is appropriate for the Court to derive this background primarily from the allegations in the operative Complaints, including the patents-in-suit, which are attached to them.
. The '179 patent specification states: "The term 'linkage disequilibrium,’ as used herein, refers to the co-occurrence of two alleles at linked loci such that the frequency of the co-occurrence of the alleles is greater than would be expected from the separate frequencies of occurrence of each allele. Alleles that co-occur with frequencies expected from their separate frequencies are said to be in 'linkage equilibrium.' ” ('179 patent at 5:25-30)
. The parties dispute whether there is a case or controversy over all claims of the patents-in-suit, particularly as GTG has yet to identify its asserted claims. The Court addresses the eligibility of claim 1 of the '179 patent. By separate order, the Court will direct the parties to apply the analysis set out here to the remaining claims of the '179 and '762 patents and then advise the Court whether further disputes remain.
. Laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are "the basic tools of scientific and technological work." Ass’n for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., 569 U.S. —,
. GTG cites to several recent reexaminations conducted by the Patent and Trademark Office ("PTO”) related to certain claims of the patents-in-suit. (See D.I. 43 at 7-8) The reexams, however, did not consider § 101. (See Tr. at 51; see also 35 U.S.C. § 302 (limiting reexams to grounds of invalidity based on "prior art”))
. See also Agilent,
. There is no factual dispute over what the correlations consist of, allowing the Court to separate the additional steps from the natural phenomenon without additional fact finding that might otherwise be required. The parties have only disputed the separate question of whether those "linkage disequilibrium" correlations constitute a "law of nature,” which the Court has concluded they do (as explained above).
. "Primer pair” is expressly defined in the patent as “a set of primers including a 5' upstream primer that hybridizes with the 5' end of the DNA sequence to be amplified and a 3' downstream primer that hybridizes with the complement of the 3' end of the sequence to be amplified.” ('179 patent at 5:66-67, 6:1-3) The patent further states: “It is well understood that for each primer pair, the 5' upstream primer hybridizes with the 5' end of the sequence to be amplified and the 3' downstream primer hybridizes with the complement of the 3' end of the sequence.” {Id. at 38:39-42)
. Recently, in multi-district litigation captioned In re BRCA1-, BRCA2-Based Hereditary Cancer Test Patent Litig., the District of Utah applied Mayo and rejected a similar attempt to argue that the claimed steps were not "routine and conventional” because the primers were designed using the discovery of a new sequence, i.e., the BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene sequences. See
. The Agilent court provided a thorough, well-reasoned, and helpful consideration of the specific arguments presented by the defendant there (Agilent) in support of its motion, and emphasized the high burden facing defendants seeking dismissal based on a section § 101 challenge on a 12(b)(6) motion. This Court reaches a different conclusion on the instant motion based on its conclusion that the moving defendants here, BMS and Merial, have carried their burden, a conclusion that is not necessarily inconsistent with the conclusion reached by the Agilent court based on the record' and arguments before it.
. GTG also contends that Defendants' arguments regarding "conventional and obvious” steps conflate the § 101 analysis with the other requirements of patentability, namely §§ 102 and 103. The Court disagrees. Bil-ski, Diehr, Flook, and Benson all "rest their holdings upon section 101, not later sections.” Mayo,
. In addition, the specification states that all of the techniques to accomplish the "analyzing” step (RFLP pattern analysis) disclosed in the specific embodiments of the invention are well known. ('179 patent at 16:28-29)
. Under the test, a process may be patentable if "(1) it is tied to a particular machine or apparatus, or (2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing.” Bilski,
. The Court is mindful that cases such as Myriad concerned composition claims only, not method claims. However, GTG's arguments rest on the supposition that the claims here are patent eligible because they incorporate a man-made composition.
. The Court found that synthesis of cDNA using mRNA results in "the inverse of the mRNA’s inverse image of the original DNA, with one important distinction: Because the natural creation of mRNA involves splicing that removes introns, the synthetic DNA created from mRNA also contains only the exon sequences.” Myriad,
. At the hearing, Plaintiff described amplification as a "copy machine.” (Tr. 43-44)
. The Court has reviewed Plaintiff's Notice of Subsequent Authority (D.I.56), advising of the recent decision in Genetic Techs. Ltd. v. GlaxoSmithKline, LLC, No. 1:12-CV-299-CCE-JL, slip op. at 3 (M.D.N.C. Aug. 22, 2014), in which defendant GlaxoSmithKline’s ("GSK”) motion to dismiss the '179 patent on the basis of § 101 was denied. The Court’s disposition here is unaltered by the GlaxoS-mithKline decision, which was largely based on a rejection of GSK's argument that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Alice required dismissal of the action. See id. at 1-3 (distinguishing Alice's "computer implementation of an abstract idea” as arising in "a completely different factual context” and "different procedural context,” i.e., summary judgment). Moreover, in finding that GSK had not- provided "clear and convincing evidence of ineligibility,” the GlaxoSmithKline court relied on GTG’s same allegations-"that the methods of the patents were neither routine nor conventional” — despite the fact that, once more, these allegations in GTG's complaint do not separate the natural law from the additional steps, as is required under Mayo. These allegations fold the newly-discovered natural law into the additional steps and use it as the basis for a factual dispute that the step cannot be "routine or obvious.” In this Court’s view, GTG’s approach renders its arguments unavailing.
