Skip to main content

Taisho’s commercial molecule Luseogliflozin has been granted patent in India after dismissal of 4-pre-grant oppositions

The patent application (6000/DELNP/2007) for the commercial compound Luseogliflozin was subject to four pre-grant opposition. The hearing u/s 25(1) held and

The patent application (6000/DELNP/2007) is directed to the compound ((1S)-1,5-anhydro-1-[3-(4-ethoxybenzyl)-6-methoxy-4-methylphenyl]-1-thio-D-glucitol), i.e., Luseogliflozin , which is an SGLT2 inhibitor.

Series of four pre-grant oppositions has been filed to delay the grant of the patent. The hearing u/s 25(1) was held and the Controller has rejected the pre-grant opposition and granted the patent for the compound, Luseogliflozin.

Luseogliflozin is a unique and novel “1-Thio-C-Glucoside” compound having a “thiol-glucosyl” ring, C-Glucosidic bond to attach “phenylene ring” with ‘thio-glucosyl” moiety; and phenylene ring is substituted at four positions, as “1-thioglucosyl”, “6-methoxy”, “4-methyl”, and “3-(4-ethoxybenzyl)” group. The Applicant also submitted evidence of four experts, including, Dr. Koji Yamamoto, Ms. Fusayo IO, Dr. Hiroyuki Kakinuma and Dr. Hideya Yuasa.

The Controller has rejected the arguments of Opponents relying on 9 documents, WO 2004014931, US 6414126, Link and Sorensen, US 6515117, WO 2004080990, Yao et al, Kajimoto et al, Hirayama et al., WO 2004063209, in order to challenge the patentability of the Luseogliflozin on the ground of lack of inventive step. Further, the Controller has also rejected the Opponent’s ground of Section 3(d) and Section 8.

The Controller held that “the cited documents do not explicitly disclose the compound of the claimed invention. And it is not easy for a person skilled in the art to conceive of modifying the prior art O-glucoside compound to arrive at Luseogliflozin, the C-glucoside compound. The cited documents do not ascertain clear and definite directions to make the compound in the claimed invention.” The order also acknowledged that a compound’s chemical and pharmacological properties do not result solely from its core or from individual substituents, but rather from the entirety of the molecule and how all its component atoms interact. Thus, the biological activity of a compound is based on the structure of the molecule as a whole. (Merck vs Glenmark 2015).

With regard to Section 3(d), the Controller held that the claims of the present application relate to a new chemical entity, Luseogliflozin and is not a mere discovery of a known substance and cannot be derived from any of the prior art compounds.

Most Recent

News & Insights

VIEW ALL
Thought Leadership
Jul 02, 2025

‘First published on WTR’ By: Safir Anand In summary This article explores the new IP Reforms 3.0 initiative in India and various developments in the

Promising reform aims to modernise IP management and protection in India 
Thought Leadership
Jun 28, 2025

‘First published on WTR’ By: Saif Khan and Prajjwal Kushwaha Legal framework Trademarks Act 1999 The Trademarks Act is the parent statutory regulation

India: lack of court harmonisation in tackling emerging online infringement threats underscores need for further case law
Thought Leadership
May 29, 2025

‘First published on Lexology’ By: Sandhya Singh, Sampada Kapoor and Kritika Gandhi Trademarks play a pivotal role in distinguishing the goods or services

Heir of the Family Trademarks
Thought Leadership
May 15, 2025

‘First published on India Business Law Journal’ By: Pravin Anand, Dr. Ajai Garg and Alvin Antony The ascendancy of large language models (LLMs) has

Navigating the AI frontier: India’s sovereign LLM quest