By Blake Brittain
Feb 6 (Reuters) - Genomics company 10x TXG.O and Harvard University have agreed to resolve a patent lawsuit against 10x's rival Vizgen four days into a scheduled two-week trial, according to a Thursday filing in Delaware federal court.
10x and Harvard had accused Vizgen of infringing patents related to gene analysis. Vizgen countersued the company and university for allegedly breaking a contract with the U.S. National Institutes of Health by monopolizing their technology.
10x, Harvard and Vizgen told the court they would dismiss the case with prejudice, which means the claims and counterclaims cannot be refiled. Representatives for 10x and Harvard said they were pleased to have resolved the dispute.
Spokespeople and an attorney for Vizgen did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
10x sued Vizgen in 2022 for allegedly infringing patents covering its Xenium In Situ gene-analysis platform. 10x licenses the patents from Harvard, and the university is also a plaintiff.
10x and Harvard requested at least $9.2 million in infringement damages, while Vizgen was seeking between $91 million and $374 million in its antitrust case, according to a court filing.
Antitrust allegations against 10x and Harvard from life sciences company Bruker BRKR.O remain ongoing in a related patent lawsuit.
The case is 10x Genomics Inc v. Vizgen Inc, U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, No. 1:22-cv-00595.
For 10x: Matthew Powers of Tensegrity Law Group
For Harvard: Geoffrey Raux of Foley & Lardner
For Vizgen: David Bilsker of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan
Read more:
10x, Harvard must face antitrust claims in gene-analysis patent cases
(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington)
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