Selected Sangamo Patents |
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U.S. Patents
U.S. Patent No. 6,534,261 (March 18, 2003)
Regulation of endogenous gene
expression in Cells Using Zinc Finger Proteins

U.S. Patent No. 6,511,808 (January 28, 2003)
Methods for Designing Exogenous Regulatory Molecules

U.S. Patent No. 6,503,717 (January 7, 2003)
Methods of Using Randomized Libraries of Zinc Finger Proteins for the Identification of gene Function

U.S. Patent No. 6,492,117 (December 10, 2002)
Zinc Finger Proteins Capable of Binding DNA Quadruplexes

U.S. Patent No. 6,453,242 (September 17, 2002)
Selection of Sites for Targeting by Zinc Finger Proteins and Methods of Designing Zinc Finger Proteins to Bind to Preselected Sites

U.S. Patent No. 6,013,453 (January 11, 2000)
Binding Proteins for Recognition of DNA

Foreign Patents
AU Patent No. 751487 (November 28, 2002)
Nucleic Acid Binding Proteins (Methylated DNA-binding ZFPs)

AU Patent No. 745844 (July 25, 2002)
Regulation of endogenous gene expression in Cells Using Zinc Finger
Proteins

AU Patent No. 744171 (May 30, 2002)
Selection of Sites for Targeting by Zinc Finger Proteins and Methods of Designing Zinc Finger Proteins to Bind to Preselected Sites

GB Patent No. 2,360,285 (February 27, 2002)
Selection of Sites for Targeting by Zinc Finger Proteins and Methods of Designing Zinc Finger Proteins to Bind to Preselected Sites

AU Patent No.737756 (December 13, 2001)
Nucleic Acid Binding Polypeptide Library

GB Patent No. 2,348, 425 (October 17, 2001)
Selection of Sites for Targeting by Zinc Finger Proteins and Methods of Designing Zinc Finger Proteins to Bind to Preselected Sites

AU Patent No. 732017 (July 26, 2001)
Nucleic Acid Binding Proteins (Design Rules)

GB Patent No. 2,348,424 (March 14, 2001)
Regulation of endogenous gene expression in Cells Using Zinc Finger
Proteins

AU Patent No. 726759 (March 8, 2001)
Improvements in or Related to Binding Proteins for Recognition of DNA

AU Patent No. 698152 (February 4, 1999)
Improvements in or Related to Binding Proteins for Recognition of DNA

Full text of U.S. patents is available on the USPTO website at http://www.uspto.gov/patft/index.html

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Unique Intellectual Property Advantages
- We have licensed the exclusive worldwide rights
to certain patents and patent applications developed at MIT, the MRC, TSRI and JHU and
directed to the design, selection and use of ZFPs and ZFP TFs for gene
regulation and ZFNs for gene modification.
- We have also internally generated intellectual
property resulting in thirty-one U.S. and fifty-four foreign issued patents to date.
- Our Enabling Technology Agreements are typically
non-exclusive and preserve our right to further develop any ZFP, ZFP
TF or ZFN application.
- ZFP TFs regulate the expression of endogenous
genes. This gives us an advantage from an intellectual property perspective
and enables us to provide work around solutions for cDNA
patents.
We believe that we dominate the intellectual property
in this space.
The company was founded with certain intellectual
property licensed from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Johnson
& Johnson, The Scripps Research Institute and Johns Hopkins University.
These licenses grant us worldwide exclusive rights to make, use and sell
ZFPs and ZFP TFs. All of these patent families have been filed in the
United States and most have been filed internationally in selected countries.
We believe these licensed patents and patent applications include all
of the early and important patent filings directed to design, selection
and use of ZFPs and ZFP TFs.
Our own internally-generated patent filings are
directed to improvements in the design and use of ZFPs and ZFP TFs. We
will continue to license and to internally develop intellectual property
covering the generation and composition of ZFPs, the genes encoding these
proteins and the application of ZFPs and ZFP TFs in therapeutics, pharmaceutical
discovery, and plant agriculture.
We endeavor to retain our rights to
our ZFP intellectual property.
Our Enabling Technology Agreements
are typically non-exclusive we endeavor to retain our right to
use the ZFPs that we design in various commercial applications with partners
or for our own product develpment programs.
ZFP TFs regulate endogenous cellular genes and therefore
provide ³workaround² solutions to cDNA patents.
An important differential advantage of our technology relates to the fact
that we use ZFP TFs to regulate endogenous cellular genes. A basic tenet
of patent law is that genes and proteins as they occur in nature,
i.e. within the context of the original cell or organism may not be patented.
A patent may only be granted if the gene or protein has been altered so
that it can be used outside its original context i.e. if the gene has
been cloned or the protein purified. Using our technology to upregulate
the expression of an endogenous gene provides ourselves and our partners
with a mechanism for working around a cDNA patent.
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