LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.
Imagine a prospector discovers a new, incredibly valuable mineral—let's call it “Healium”—buried deep in a public mountain range. This mineral has the unique property of curing a specific disease. The prospector painstakingly digs it up, cleans it, and presents it to the world. Should they be allowed to get a patent not just on their method of extraction, but on Healium itself? Could they prevent anyone else from digging up Healium, even on the other side of the mountain? This is the exact dilemma the `supreme_court_of_the_united_states` faced in Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., but instead of a mineral, the “discovery” was a segment of your own DNA. The case asked a monumental question: Can a private company own a piece of the human genome? The Court's answer reshaped the landscape of medicine, patient rights, and scientific innovation forever, directly impacting the cost and availability of life-saving genetic tests for diseases like breast and ovarian cancer.
In the 1990s, scientists made a monumental breakthrough in the fight against cancer. Researchers at the University of Utah, funded in part by Myriad Genetics, identified the exact location and sequence of two specific human genes: BRCA1 and BRCA2. Mutations on these genes were found to be strongly linked to a dramatically increased risk of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. This was a life-changing discovery. With this knowledge, individuals could be tested to see if they carried these mutations, allowing them to make proactive, life-saving decisions about their health. Myriad Genetics, a young biotech company, quickly capitalized on this discovery. They obtained a series of patents that gave them a complete monopoly in the United States over the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes themselves, as well as any method of testing for them. For nearly two decades, if you wanted to be tested for these critical mutations, you had one option: Myriad. This monopoly had profound consequences:
This situation gained widespread public attention when actress Angelina Jolie wrote a New York Times op-ed in 2013, revealing she had undergone a preventive double mastectomy after a Myriad test showed she carried the BRCA1 mutation. While her story raised crucial awareness, it also highlighted the high cost and limited access that defined the era of Myriad's patent monopoly.
The scientific and patient communities grew increasingly frustrated. They argued that a company should not be able to own a fundamental piece of the human body. In 2009, the `american_civil_liberties_union` (ACLU) and the Public Patent Foundation filed a lawsuit on behalf of the `association_for_molecular_pathology` (AMP), researchers, genetic counselors, and patients. The case began a long and winding journey through the federal court system:
With the lower courts in disagreement, the stage was set for a final, definitive showdown at the `supreme_court_of_the_united_states`.
The entire case boiled down to a single section of U.S. patent law, 35_usc_101, which states that anyone who “invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter” may obtain a patent. However, the courts have long established crucial exceptions to this rule. You cannot patent:
1. **Laws of Nature** (e.g., E=mc², gravity) 2. **Natural Phenomena** (e.g., a new mineral found in the earth, a plant) 3. **Abstract Ideas** (e.g., a mathematical algorithm)
The challengers argued that a human gene, even when removed from the body, is a classic “natural phenomenon.” It contains the same exact genetic information as it does inside our cells. Myriad, on the other hand, argued that by isolating the gene—a complex biochemical process—they had created a new “composition of matter” that was distinct from its natural state and therefore a patentable invention. The Supreme Court had to decide: is isolating a gene an act of discovery or an act of invention?
On June 13, 2013, the Supreme Court issued a unanimous (9-0) decision that fundamentally altered the landscape of biotechnology. In an opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas, the Court delivered a nuanced but powerful verdict: naturally occurring DNA is not patentable, but synthetic DNA can be. The decision was a major victory for the petitioners and a blow to Myriad Genetics, effectively invalidating the most critical claims of its patents.
The Court's reasoning was elegant in its simplicity. It carefully distinguished between two types of DNA at the heart of the case: isolated genomic DNA (gDNA) and complementary DNA (cDNA). Understanding this distinction is key to understanding the ruling.
Myriad's primary argument was that its scientists had invented something new by snipping the BRCA genes out of the vastly longer strand of human DNA. The Court flatly rejected this. Justice Thomas wrote that Myriad “did not create anything. To be sure, it found an important and useful gene, but separating that gene from its surrounding genetic material is not an act of invention.” He used a powerful analogy: a person who discovers a new, valuable plant in the wild cannot patent the plant itself, even if they were the first to recognize its useful properties. Likewise, “the discovery of the precise location and sequence of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes” was a groundbreaking scientific achievement, but it was a discovery, not an invention. The Court held that the genetic information encoded in the BRCA genes was the same inside the body as it was in Myriad's isolated sample. The act of isolation did not change the gene's fundamental quality as a product of nature. This officially closed the door on patenting genes that are simply taken from a natural source.
The Court then turned to cDNA. This is where the science gets a little more complex, but the legal principle is clear.
Because cDNA is created by stitching together only the exons, its sequence is different from the gene as it exists in our bodies. It is an edited, intron-free version. The Supreme Court seized on this difference. Justice Thomas wrote that cDNA is “not a 'product of nature,'“ and is therefore patent-eligible under 35_usc_101 because the lab technician “unquestionably creates something new” when making it. To use an analogy, if a natural gene is a full-length novel with chapter introductions and appendices (introns), cDNA is like a “Reader's Digest” version containing only the core story chapters (exons). It's derived from the original, but it's a new, human-made creation.
The Myriad ruling created a clear dividing line for biotech companies across the nation. It didn't destroy all biotech patents, but it forced a major shift in strategy, moving away from patenting discoveries and toward patenting genuine applications and inventions.
| Jurisdiction/Entity | What is Patentable After Myriad? | What is NOT Patentable After Myriad? | What This Means For You |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal (USPTO) | cDNA, novel methods of using genes (diagnostics), genetically modified organisms, new therapeutic drugs. | Isolated but otherwise unmodified DNA and RNA, correlations between genes and disease (laws of nature). | The `us_patent_and_trademark_office` will reject any patent application claiming a naturally occurring gene sequence. |
| Biotech in CA | Focus on patenting innovative diagnostic processes and `crispr`-based gene-editing tools. | Claims on newly discovered genetic biomarkers are rejected; instead, companies patent the test kit or method. | A company in Silicon Valley can't own the gene for Alzheimer's, but it can patent a new AI algorithm that diagnoses it. |
| Research in MA | Universities patent new forms of synthetic DNA used in mRNA vaccines (e.g., Moderna). | Basic research identifying a gene's function is considered a discovery, not an invention. | Research at Harvard or MIT is encouraged, but the raw discoveries enter the public domain faster, spurring innovation. |
| Pharma in NJ | Companies patent man-made antibodies or other protein therapies derived from genetic information. | A naturally occurring antibody found in a patient is not patentable. | Pharmaceutical giants must invest in creating novel molecules, not just identifying natural ones. |
The *Myriad* decision was not an abstract legal debate; it had immediate, tangible consequences for millions of Americans, transforming the landscape of personal medicine.
The moment the Supreme Court's decision was announced, the world of genetic testing changed.
While you won't file legal forms, understanding the documents you receive after the *Myriad* decision is crucial.
The *Myriad* ruling didn't happen in a vacuum. It was the culmination of decades of legal precedent grappling with the line between nature and technology.
The *Myriad* decision settled the question of patenting natural genes, but it opened up a new Pandora's box of legal challenges at the cutting edge of biotechnology.
The new frontier is not about reading genes, but about writing and editing them. Technologies like `crispr` (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) have created a gene-editing tool of unprecedented power and precision. This has led to fierce, multi-billion dollar patent battles, most notably between the University of California and the Broad Institute. The legal questions are different now:
These patents are generally considered stronger than Myriad's were because they cover a human-made technology—a method and a tool—not the underlying gene being edited. However, the courts are still working to define the precise boundaries, applying the principles from *Mayo* and *Myriad* to this revolutionary new field.
The next wave of legal challenges will likely involve the intersection of genetics, big data, and artificial intelligence. Companies are now developing complex algorithms that can analyze a person's entire genome, along with their health records and lifestyle data, to predict their risk for hundreds of diseases. This raises new questions:
As technology continues to evolve, the courts will be forced to repeatedly revisit the fundamental question at the heart of the *Myriad* case: where is the line between discovering a truth about our natural world and inventing a tool that benefits humanity? The legacy of *Myriad* is its powerful reminder that the basic building blocks of nature—including our own genes—are the shared inheritance of all people, and cannot be owned.