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Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division http://www. cals . wisc . edu /research/ May 17, 2007
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Page 1: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Material Transfer Agreements

CALS Research Division

http://www.cals.wisc.edu/research/

May 17, 2007

Page 2: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Overview:

1. What is a Material Transfer Agreement?Incoming Material Transfer AgreementOutgoing Material Transfer Agreement

2. Understanding agreement issues, concerns and potential problems

3. Components required before routing4. UW-Madison routing, review and approval process5. Questions/suggestions

Page 3: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

What are Material Transfer Agreements?

MTAs are contracts defining the respective rights and obligations of the Provider and the Recipient of materials used in research

Biological materials such as genetic constructs, plasmids, proteins, DNA, cell lines, seed lines, plant germplasm, organisms (mice)

Chemical compounds or polymers, potential new drugs Software programs and tools

Page 4: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Incoming Material Transfer Agreement

Materials provided TO a recipient scientist by any party, including an academic or non-profit institution, a federal laboratory or government agency, a for-profit company, an industrial research laboratory or hospital laboratory, or even another investigator at the same institution

Page 5: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

From Educational & Non-Profit Sources

Under UBMTA (Uniform Biological Material Transfer Agreement) Implementing Letter, a short form used when parties are

signatories to this 1995 agreement for exchange of materials for non-commercial purposes, its use confirms that recipient has signed the UBMTA and accepts material under UBMTA terms and conditions (signatories listed at Association of University Technology Managers site) http://www.autm.net/aboutTT/aboutTT_umbtaSigs.cfm

Page 6: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

From Educational & Non-Profit Sources

If a non-profit institution is a non-signatory or elects not to utilize the Implementing Letter, the same UBMTA definitions and terms are expanded upon via additional text in Simple Letter Agreement for Transfer of Materials

See RSP “Principal Investigators’ Guide to Material Transfer Agreements” for more information and to download forms

http://www.rsp.wisc.edu/awardmgt/mta.html

Page 7: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Incoming from For-Profit Entities

Industry/company for-profit providers usually utilize their own MTA templates, delineating terms and conditions that protect and advance their commercial interests

UW-Madison accepts these as an initial negotiating point; finalizing mutually agreeable terms can be a lengthy process

Page 8: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Outgoing Material Transfer Agreement

Materials sent FROM a providing scientist at UW-Madison to an off-campus recipient at another academic or non-profit institution (or on same campus) UBMTA ‘Implementing Letter’ or ‘Simple Letter of

Agreement’ used Materials sent to a for-profit company/industry

‘Simple Letter of Agreement’ is preferred template

Page 9: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Outgoing MTA if IP Assigned to WARF

If material to be transferred is identified as intellectual property that is part of a pending or issued patent under WARF management, or is assigned to WARF as a “biological material,” follow WARF guidelines for required material transfer agreement: http://www.warf.org/inventors/index.jsp?cid=17&scid=21

Page 10: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Outgoing MTA, For-Profit Entities

Absent any other constraints on distribution and absent WARF assignment of rights to the material, CALS Research Division will work directly with a researcher to craft an agreement allowing the material to be shared with a business/ industry recipient. Such will be grounded in UBMTA terms.

CALS requires that an outgoing MTA be in place prior to a researcher sending materials to any off-campus recipient party.

Page 11: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Conflicting Missions in MTAs

Industry seeks to enhance & defend its commercial interests, intent upon offsetting risks by acquiring and protecting exclusivity in the market (under patent law or by use of trade secrets), securing rights to inventions using its materials.

Academic institutions seek to preserve the flow of ideas for public benefit, and to preserve the potential for new knowledge to generate a product from which the public can benefit.

Page 12: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

MTA Goal: Balancing Act

A Material Transfer Agreement attempts to balance university goals: Help investigators acquire materials to advance research Allow timely publication Facilitate public stewardship of invention for public

benefit--Bayh-Dole provisions Protect investigator’s freedom to pursue future, related

research problems Assure that institution can meet its contractual obligations

Page 13: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

MTAs regularly address:

Conditions for control of the proprietary information (allowed material use and transfer limits)

Publication rights and dissemination of research results

Future intellectual property rights (ownership, licensing opportunity)

Confidentiality Limits to liability and warranties (insurance,

indemnification)

Page 14: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

How are MTAs beneficial? Promote university collaborations & expand

scientific discovery Avoid disputes regarding material use Protect IP developed while using materials Protect publication rights Avoid limiting future research Allow access to industry technology to advance

research Promote university-industry collaborations that

could lead to sponsored research

Page 15: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Concern: Restricting Academic Freedom

Agreement language may give provider control of publication, and may assert that nothing can be published or disclosed without provider approval; may demand excessive delays to publication (60-90 days)

University publication policy: knowledge generated with donated material must be publishable Acceptable delay: 30 days for provider review/comment Additional 60 days to allow protection of provider IP Or any combination <= 90 days

Page 16: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Concern: Ownership Rights Providers may assert ownership not only to the physical

material being provided, but also to new materials created by the recipient or inventions made through use of the provided materials.

In a proposed agreement, “material” may be defined to include confidential information about the material as well as the forms of the material which may arise from replication and maintenance in the recipient laboratory (progeny, derivatives)

If accepted, such terms may cause recipient to lose control of his/her own creations, including inventions and intellectual property. Recipient could be unable to continue a line of research inquiry due to relinquished ownership of research results.

Page 17: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Concern: Licensing Rights to IP When a company makes materials available for use

in university research, it usually expects some access to resulting intellectual property.

Terms which give the provider licensing rights to resulting IP must be crafted to ensure that the rights of research sponsors are protected, the licensee company will diligently develop the

intellectual property for public use, and the university receives fair compensation for

its contribution.

Page 18: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Concern: Obligations to Funding Sponsors Since the provider of materials is most often not

funding the research, the university needs to ensure that its intellectual property obligations to the sponsors who are funding the work do not conflict with the proposed obligations to the provider of the material.

If under federal funding, the rights of the federal government regarding inventions made with the material may need to be clearly acknowledged in the agreement.

Page 19: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Data Ownership Per UW policy, no agreement shall be entered into

with any extramural sponsor which allows for the transfer of the ownership of data. (This does not apply to proprietary data originally belonging to a sponsor.)

Material provider can receive a copy of UW data for internal research and development purposes, or a copy of data in report context.

Page 20: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Confidentiality Issues

Information shared along with material by a provider will be protected as confidential by UW if at time of disclosure the information is identified

in writing as confidential the duration of the confidentiality requirement is

reasonable (2-5 years)

Page 21: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Legal Issues UW will accept liability only to the extent allowed

under Wisconsin law. Wisconsin law does not allow indemnification of other parties to an agreement. “indemnification” is basically releasing the provider from

responsibility to make good on damage occurring as a result of provider action or inaction, holding the provider harmless, a shifting of economic responsibility to the recipient

No court can have jurisdiction over UW unless the state legislature determines to accept that court’s authority.

Page 22: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Special Shipping Requirements USDA import regulations may cover biological

materials from overseas sources, in some cases requiring permits e.g., CDC permit for human pathogens; USDA & CDC

permits for any pathogen or vector of disease US shipment of biological materials is regulated by

multiple agencies. Specialized packaging, shipping papers, permits or licenses from government agencies may be required http://www2.fpm.wisc.edu/biosafety/shipping_hazmat/regulations.htm

Page 23: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Components Required Before Routing PI/Department responsibilities:

Procure two original copies of an MTA Procure an electronic file copy of the MTA document, for

use in RSP review and term negotiations (not needed for UBMTA-related agreements)

Provide contact information (name, e-mail address, FAX and phone numbers, mailing address) for the other institution/industry technology transfer office and for the party with whom you have been working (scientist, administrator)

Page 24: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

More Components Required (PI/Dept) Designate the source of funding that will support

research using the materials requested (144-xxxx; 133-xxxx)

Prepare transmittal form; include submission instructions (prepaid express shipping label, US mail, fax transmission)

Check to see if PI signature is requested on the agreement signature page; the PI often signs as Recipient Scientist or Recipient Investigator for incoming MTAs and as Provider Scientist for outgoing MTAs

Page 25: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

PI’s Name & Signature for Entire Lab Agreements may request signature from Recipient Scientist or

Recipient Investigator to acknowledge understanding and acceptance of agreement terms. Only the principal investigator (as faculty member, grants manager, and advisor/mentor to graduate students and postdocs) can be named and can sign in this “Recipient Scientist/Investigator” role. (not lab Scientists, Researchers, or any other positions)

When grad students/postdocs complete MTA requests online, e.g. from Addgene Plasmid Repository, ALWAYS USE the faculty PI name and contact information.

Page 26: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Formal Party to an MTA The institution, and not an individual faculty

member or department, is the formal party to any agreement.

The MTA “Recipient” or “Recipient Institution” should be indicated as: Board of Regents of the University of

Wisconsin System, on behalf of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, a public educational institution located at 21 North Park Street, Suite 6401, Madison, Wisconsin 53715-1218

Page 27: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Authorized Institutional Signatory

The “authorized institutional signatory” role is filled by Research & Sponsored Programs, with the authority to commit The Board of Regents to an agreement on behalf of the requesting faculty member.

Strictly speaking, Diane Barrett as Assistant Director, Pre-Award Services serves as our authorized institutional official. Others at RSP are authorized to sign on institution’s behalf.

Page 28: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

CALS Research Division Role Review T-form and documentation Review for conflicts with funding source May negotiate terms with Provider May consult with WARF regarding IP position Communicate with Research & Sponsored

Programs, working together to establish desirable agreements

Page 29: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

RSP Role Final review of documentation Negotiation of terms with Provider, if needed Negotiation of IP position, with WARF input as

necessary Signature on behalf of Board of Regents Distribution of fully executed agreement

Page 30: Material Transfer Agreements CALS Research Division  May 17, 2007.

Responsible Actions Make sure that an MTA is fully in place before

receiving materials from an outside source. If materials ARE received before an MTA is in place

(which can occur) please WAIT to use them in research until an agreement is in place. Serious conflicts over intellectual property ownership

may result if work is performed under the belief that an agreement is in place--only to later learn that UW was unable to accept the proposed terms.