Definition and concepts of Patent, IPR, Farmers’ right, Breeder’s right, Bioprospecting and Biopiracy MCQs With Answer

Introduction: This concise guide introduces key concepts in intellectual property relevant to pharmacy: Patent basics, broader IPR (intellectual property rights), Farmers’ right and Breeder’s right, plus ethical and legal issues in Bioprospecting and Biopiracy. B. Pharm students will learn patentability criteria, claim scope, disclosure and enforcement, plant variety protection, benefit-sharing, traditional knowledge protection, and international frameworks like TRIPS, CBD and the Nagoya Protocol. Emphasis is on how these rules affect drug discovery, access to genetic resources, and fair use of indigenous knowledge. Clear examples and practical points prepare you for exams and professional practice. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. What is a patent?

  • A government grant allowing free use of an invention by everyone
  • A time-limited exclusive right to prevent others from commercially exploiting an invention
  • A certificate for trademark registration
  • A mandatory open license for all new drugs

Correct Answer: A time-limited exclusive right to prevent others from commercially exploiting an invention

Q2. Which three criteria are essential for patentability in most jurisdictions?

  • Novelty, inventive step (non-obviousness), industrial applicability
  • High market value, political support, international cooperation
  • Prior publication, common use, essentiality
  • Registered trademark, copyright, trade secret

Correct Answer: Novelty, inventive step (non-obviousness), industrial applicability

Q3. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) typically include which of the following?

  • Patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets
  • Only patents and plant breeders’ rights
  • Natural resource rights and land titles
  • Medical licenses and professional certifications

Correct Answer: Patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets

Q4. Which statement best defines Farmers’ right under international treaties?

  • Farmers must register every seed they save with a patent office
  • Rights ensuring farmers can save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed and protect traditional knowledge
  • Exclusive commercial rights for corporations to control seeds
  • A right that replaces breeder’s rights entirely

Correct Answer: Rights ensuring farmers can save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed and protect traditional knowledge

Q5. What is Breeder’s right (Plant Breeders’ Rights)?

  • A trade secret covering all plant cultivation methods
  • An exclusive right granted to developers of new plant varieties to control propagation material
  • An open-source license for plant genomes
  • A criminal sanction for unauthorized seed saving

Correct Answer: An exclusive right granted to developers of new plant varieties to control propagation material

Q6. How does bioprospecting differ from biopiracy?

  • Bioprospecting is illegal; biopiracy is legal commercialization
  • Bioprospecting is ethical, regulated exploration for genetic/biochemical resources; biopiracy is unauthorized or exploitative appropriation
  • They are synonymous terms
  • Biopiracy refers only to animal species while bioprospecting refers only to plants

Correct Answer: Bioprospecting is ethical, regulated exploration for genetic/biochemical resources; biopiracy is unauthorized or exploitative appropriation

Q7. Which international agreement sets minimum standards for IP, including patents on pharmaceuticals?

  • CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity)
  • Nagoya Protocol
  • TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights)
  • UPOV (International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants)

Correct Answer: TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights)

Q8. What is the typical patent term for inventions in most countries under TRIPS?

  • 5 years from grant
  • 10 years from filing
  • 20 years from filing
  • Life of the inventor plus 50 years

Correct Answer: 20 years from filing

Q9. What does “prior art” mean in patent law?

  • Artworks created before the invention
  • All publicly available information that may affect novelty or inventive step before filing date
  • Any unpublished laboratory notebook
  • A government database of biological materials only

Correct Answer: All publicly available information that may affect novelty or inventive step before filing date

Q10. Which requirement ensures a patent application enables a person skilled in the art to perform the invention?

  • Priority claim
  • Enablement / sufficiency of disclosure
  • Trademark registration
  • Payment of maintenance fees

Correct Answer: Enablement / sufficiency of disclosure

Q11. Which of the following best describes “inventive step” or non-obviousness?

  • The invention must be more profitable than previous products
  • The invention would not be obvious to a person skilled in the art based on prior art
  • The invention is the first ever idea in any field
  • The invention has the shortest production process

Correct Answer: The invention would not be obvious to a person skilled in the art based on prior art

Q12. What is a compulsory license in the context of patents?

  • A license voluntarily given by the patent owner for free
  • A government-ordered permission allowing others to use a patented invention without owner’s consent under defined conditions
  • An exclusive international patent exchange program
  • A license that prevents generic manufacture permanently

Correct Answer: A government-ordered permission allowing others to use a patented invention without owner’s consent under defined conditions

Q13. Which national law in India specifically addresses protection of plant varieties and farmers’ rights?

  • The Patents Act, 1970
  • The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001
  • The Indian Seed Act, 1933
  • The Biological Diversity Act, 2002

Correct Answer: The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001

Q14. UPOV is best described as:

  • A global treaty framework for access and benefit-sharing
  • An international convention providing guidelines for plant variety protection and breeder’s rights
  • A trade agreement about pharmaceuticals
  • A database of traditional medicinal recipes

Correct Answer: An international convention providing guidelines for plant variety protection and breeder’s rights

Q15. What is the Nagoya Protocol primarily concerned with?

  • Harmonizing patent term lengths globally
  • Access to genetic resources and fair and equitable sharing of benefits (ABS)
  • Regulation of clinical trials
  • Trademark disputes in biotechnology

Correct Answer: Access to genetic resources and fair and equitable sharing of benefits (ABS)

Q16. Which practice helps prevent biopiracy of traditional medicinal knowledge?

  • Keeping all knowledge secret with no documentation
  • Documenting traditional knowledge in databases like TKDL and implementing access-benefit-sharing agreements
  • Immediate patenting of all herbal recipes worldwide without community consent
  • Prohibiting research on native species entirely

Correct Answer: Documenting traditional knowledge in databases like TKDL and implementing access-benefit-sharing agreements

Q17. Which is a common element of a bioprospecting agreement?

  • Prior informed consent (PIC) and mutually agreed terms including benefit-sharing
  • Guaranteed patent grant regardless of novelty
  • Exclusive expropriation of community land
  • Immediate transfer of all community rights to the foreign company

Correct Answer: Prior informed consent (PIC) and mutually agreed terms including benefit-sharing

Q18. Which mechanism can pharmaceutical companies use to legally access genetic resources from a country under ABS frameworks?

  • Seizing samples without consent
  • Negotiating access and benefit-sharing (ABS) agreements with national authorities and local communities
  • Patenting the community’s traditional knowledge directly
  • Exporting resources without declaration to avoid regulation

Correct Answer: Negotiating access and benefit-sharing (ABS) agreements with national authorities and local communities

Q19. Which example is a landmark case often cited to illustrate biopiracy reversal due to prior traditional knowledge?

  • The patent on synthetic insulin
  • The turmeric/curcumin patent case where prior traditional use led to revocation
  • The patent for paracetamol
  • The maize hybrid patent enforcement case

Correct Answer: The turmeric/curcumin patent case where prior traditional use led to revocation

Q20. What is the function of patent claims in a patent document?

  • To provide full experimental data only
  • To define the legal scope and boundaries of the patent owner’s exclusive rights
  • To list all potential markets for the product
  • To register trademarks associated with the invention

Correct Answer: To define the legal scope and boundaries of the patent owner’s exclusive rights

Q21. Which strategy can a pharmaceutical company adopt to respect Farmers’ and Breeder’s rights during drug discovery from plant resources?

  • Ignore local agreements and rely solely on patents
  • Engage communities, obtain PIC, and implement benefit-sharing and capacity-building measures
  • Replace all natural extracts with synthetic analogs without disclosure
  • Export genetic samples clandestinely to avoid regulations

Correct Answer: Engage communities, obtain PIC, and implement benefit-sharing and capacity-building measures

Q22. Which is true about patenting a natural product extract used traditionally?

  • Traditional use automatically makes the extract patentable
  • Traditional use may constitute prior art and prevent patentability unless a novel, inventive application or modification is claimed
  • Patents are never allowed on natural substances
  • Patenting requires no disclosure of source or traditional knowledge

Correct Answer: Traditional use may constitute prior art and prevent patentability unless a novel, inventive application or modification is claimed

Q23. Which documentation system was developed in India to prevent misappropriation of traditional knowledge?

  • WIPO Patent Library
  • Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL)
  • International Plant Treaty Archive
  • Global Patent Exchange

Correct Answer: Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL)

Q24. What is a sui generis system in the context of plant variety protection?

  • A generic patent applicable to all inventions
  • A specialized legal system tailored to protect plant varieties distinct from standard patent law
  • A trademark regime for seeds
  • An international military treaty

Correct Answer: A specialized legal system tailored to protect plant varieties distinct from standard patent law

Q25. Which authority administers patent applications in India?

  • Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)
  • Controller General of Patents, Designs & Trade Marks (Indian Patent Office)
  • Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)
  • Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)

Correct Answer: Controller General of Patents, Designs & Trade Marks (Indian Patent Office)

Q26. Which remedy is commonly sought in a patent infringement lawsuit?

  • Criminal imprisonment of all researchers involved
  • Injunction to stop infringing activity and monetary damages
  • Automatic transfer of patent ownership to the plaintiff
  • A compulsory open-source release of the invention

Correct Answer: Injunction to stop infringing activity and monetary damages

Q27. Which of the following best describes “farmers’ privilege” under some PVP laws?

  • A privilege allowing farmers to save, use, replant, exchange or sell farm-saved seed of protected varieties under specified conditions
  • A right for breeders to prohibit any seed saving by farmers
  • An obligation for farmers to pay fees to foreign corporations for traditional seeds
  • A rule that forbids the cultivation of any improved variety on small farms

Correct Answer: A privilege allowing farmers to save, use, replant, exchange or sell farm-saved seed of protected varieties under specified conditions

Q28. Which international body provides policy guidance on IP and traditional knowledge, and often collaborates with national governments?

  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
  • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • World Trade Organization’s agricultural division only

Correct Answer: World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)

Q29. Which action can reduce the risk of a patent being invalidated on grounds of lack of novelty?

  • Delaying filing until after public disclosure
  • Filing a patent application before any public disclosure and conducting thorough prior art searches
  • Relying solely on trade secrets without filing
  • Publishing the invention widely before filing to establish authorship

Correct Answer: Filing a patent application before any public disclosure and conducting thorough prior art searches

Q30. Under benefit-sharing principles, what should a company typically provide to provider communities when deriving drugs from local biodiversity?

  • Nothing, because resources are free for commercial use
  • Equitable benefit-sharing such as monetary compensation, technology transfer, capacity building, or co-authorship depending on agreed terms
  • Exclusive patents without community involvement
  • Immediate privatization of community land

Correct Answer: Equitable benefit-sharing such as monetary compensation, technology transfer, capacity building, or co-authorship depending on agreed terms

Author

  • G S Sachin
    : Author

    G S Sachin is a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. He holds a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research and creates clear, accurate educational content on pharmacology, drug mechanisms of action, pharmacist learning, and GPAT exam preparation.

    Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

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