By Jason Derry —

Sigma-Aldrich
Sigma-Aldrich has announced that it has agreed to give Pfizer a
non-exclusive, worldwide license to use DNA-directed RNAi (ddRNAi) for research
purposes.  Sigma-Aldrich has an exclusive
license to the ddRNAi technology (excluding the right to develop ddRNAi for
therapeutic use in humans) from Benitec Ltd. and Australia's CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Organization).

Benitec
Benitec is an Australian biotechnology company that
focuses on DNA-directed gene silencing. According to its website, Benitec has 10 issued patents relating to
ddRNAi.  Benitec's first ddRNAi patent in
the U.S. is 6,573,099.

Jason Derry, Ph.D., who graduated with honors from DePaul University
College of Law, is a molecular biologist and founding author of Patent Docs.

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One response to “Pfizer Licenses ddRNAi Technology from Sigma-Aldrich”

  1. Tom Blasack Avatar
    Tom Blasack

    It’s frankly stunning that those claims weren’t found inherently anticipated by the prior art.
    Nobody prior to the filing date put two copies of a structural gene under control of a single non-bacterial promoter?

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