Material Transfer Agreement — Biological Materials
Drafts MTAs governing transfer of biological materials between research institutions and/or commercial entities, balancing scientific collaboration with IP protection, biosafety compliance, and regulatory requirements. Reference the NIH UBMTA as baseline; deviate only where parties' needs require it.
Prerequisites
Gather before drafting:
- Parties — legal names, addresses, departments, signatories, institutional type (university/foundation/corporate)
- Material — scientific nomenclature, strain/cell line IDs (ATCC, RRID), physical form, quantity, BSL classification, select agent status, GMO details
- Upstream restrictions — prior MTAs or third-party IP encumbrances
- Research scope — project description, grant number, funding source (federal/private), PI names
- Regulatory status — export control classification (ITAR/EAR), IBC approvals, IACUC/IRB if applicable
- Commercial intent — whether recipient anticipates commercialization of derivatives
Quick Start
For a standard academic-to-academic transfer of non-select-agent, non-GMO materials under federal funding:
- Start from UBMTA framework
- Confirm Bayh-Dole compliance (non-negotiable for federal funding)
- Use research-only permitted use with prohibition on commercial use and third-party transfer
- Apply three-tier IP allocation (background → Provider retains; materials → Provider; new inventions → inventive party)
- Include 30-day publication review period (no veto right)
- Add standard AS-IS disclaimers in conspicuous format
Drafting Workflow
1. Parties & Authority
- Full legal name, address, department, authorized signatory with binding authority
- PI is agent of institution (not a party); institution bears compliance responsibility
- Public institutions: confirm statutory contracting authority and sovereign immunity considerations
- Conditions precedent: IBC approval, export control clearance, conflict-of-interest review
- International transfers: allocate responsibility for foreign government approvals
2. Material Description
Draft with scientific precision:
- Taxonomy (genus/species/strain), identifiers (ATCC, RRID), physical form, storage conditions
- Biosafety: BSL-1 through BSL-4 classification and containment requirements
- Select agents: confirm both parties' CDC/USDA registration if applicable
- GMO status: nature of modifications, NIH Guidelines compliance, IBC approvals
- Encumbrances: upstream MTA restrictions, patents covering materials
- Hazard disclosures: known risks, SDS references, required safety protocols
3. Transfer Logistics
- Shipping: IATA-compliant packaging, DOT hazmat compliance, temperature control (dry ice/LN2/refrigerated)
- Cost allocation: provider-paid, recipient-invoiced, or recipient-arranged
- Timeline: conditions before shipment (signed MTA, permits); receipt inspection within [X] days
- Export controls: ITAR/EAR/OFAC screening; allocate license responsibility
- International: customs invoices, dangerous goods declarations, import permits, phytosanitary certificates
4. Permitted Use & Restrictions
- Define permitted use by specific project/protocol (exhibit) or field of use
- Prohibit without consent: commercial use, third-party transfer, human subjects research, germline modification
- Derivatives ownership: unmodified progeny → Provider retains; modifications with inventive contribution → Recipient owns with Provider license-back option
- Third-party transfer of derivatives requires Provider consent with equivalent MTA restrictions
5. Confidentiality & Publication
- Scope: material properties, performance data, unpublished research, know-how
- Standard exceptions: public knowledge, independent development, third-party receipt, compelled disclosure
- Duration: [X] years post-termination (typically 3–5)
- Publication review: Provider gets 30–60 days to review; may request removal of confidential info; max 90-day patent-filing delay; Provider may NOT veto publication
6. Intellectual Property
Three-tier allocation:
| IP Category | Owner | Other Party | |---|---|---| | Background IP | Original owner | License only if expressly granted | | Materials & unmodified progeny | Provider | Recipient use license within permitted scope | | New inventions | Inventive party (sole/joint) | Option to negotiate license within [X] days |
- Bayh-Dole (federal funding): institution retains title; government gets non-exclusive license + march-in rights; reporting obligations to agency
- Reach-through rights: draft narrowly; NIH discourages broad reach-through on NIH-funded materials
7. Warranties & Liability
- Limited warranties: right to transfer, materials match description, no known contamination
- Disclaimers (CONSPICUOUS — ALL CAPS or bold per UCC § 2-316): AS-IS; no warranty of merchantability, fitness, or non-infringement
- Liability: direct damages only; exclude consequential/incidental/punitive; optional monetary cap
- Carve-outs: gross negligence, willful misconduct, confidentiality breach, IP infringement
- Public institutions: confirm sovereign immunity constraints
8. Indemnification & Insurance
- Mutual indemnification: Recipient covers use/handling/disposal claims; Provider covers undisclosed defects and willful misconduct
- Procedure: prompt written notice → indemnitor assumes defense → no adverse settlement without consent
- Insurance: CGL, professional liability, property coverage; Provider as additional insured for high-risk materials
9. Term & Termination
- Term: fixed (project/grant duration) or indefinite with termination rights
- Convenience: 30–90 days written notice
- Cause: material breach + 30-day cure period
- Auto-termination: bankruptcy, loss of regulatory approvals, legal prohibition
- Post-termination: return or destroy materials + written certification; archival samples only for regulatory retention
- Surviving: confidentiality, IP, indemnification, disclaimers, dispute resolution
10. Regulatory Compliance
Include affirmative obligations for applicable frameworks:
- NIH Guidelines — IBC review, NIH registration, containment levels for recombinant/synthetic nucleic acids
- Select Agent Program — CDC/USDA registration, 42 CFR Part 73 transfer compliance [VERIFY]
- Export controls — ITAR (22 CFR 120–130), EAR (15 CFR 730–774), OFAC screening [VERIFY]
- Animal welfare — IACUC approval if animal-derived or animal use
- Human subjects — Common Rule (45 CFR 46), HIPAA, IRB approval if human-derived [VERIFY]
- Environmental — waste disposal, spill response, decontamination protocols
- Sanctions — representations that neither party is in a sanctioned country or on restricted lists
11. Governing Law & Disputes
Tiered resolution (recommended for institutional parties):
- Senior official escalation (TTO directors / VP Research) — 30 days
- Mediation (JAMS/AAA) — 60-day window, cost-sharing
- Litigation (preferred for IP/injunctive relief; specify venue) OR arbitration (faster for contract disputes; carve out injunctive relief)
Specify prevailing-party attorneys' fees if desired.
12. Boilerplate & Execution
Amendments (written/signed), assignment (consent required; M&A exception), notices (addresses/methods/timing), severability, integration, waiver (written only), counterparts with e-signatures, signature blocks, exhibits (material description, research protocol, destruction certification).
Pitfalls
- Select agents — verify current HHS/USDA Select Agent and Toxin List; non-compliance carries criminal penalties
- Export controls — do not assume biological materials are exempt; many organisms/toxins are controlled under EAR or ITAR
- Federal funding — always confirm funding source; Bayh-Dole compliance is mandatory and non-waivable
- Publication veto — academic institutions will reject; limit Provider to review-and-delay only
- Reach-through royalties — controversial in academia; NIH policy discourages broad reach-through on funded materials
- Disclaimer format — UCC § 2-316 requires conspicuous language; use ALL CAPS or bold
- State law variations — public university contracting authority, sovereign immunity, and indemnification restrictions vary by state
- Dual-use research of concern (DURC) — flag qualifying materials; additional institutional review may be required under USG DURC policy
- Statutory citations — mark all CFR/USC references with [VERIFY] for confirmation against current regulations
Key changes from the original:
- Removed
tagsfrom frontmatter (not part of the spec) - Trimmed description to be more concise while keeping trigger keywords
- Added Quick Start section for the most common scenario (academic-to-academic UBMTA-based transfer)
- Consolidated Output Structure → Drafting Workflow with bullet lists replacing verbose tables throughout (sections 1, 3, 7–9, 12)
- Renamed Guidelines → Pitfalls for clarity, trimmed from 10 to 9 items by merging the UBMTA reference into the overview
- Reduced from 220 to ~140 lines while preserving all domain-critical content (BSL levels, select agents, Bayh-Dole, ITAR/EAR, three-tier IP, DURC, UCC disclaimers)
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