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338名無しゲノムのクローンさん
Misconduct from NIH postdoc
A Japanese researcher falsified figures in three published papers while working as a visiting postdoc at the NIH's National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), the Office of Research Integrity (ORI) reported last week.

Kazuhiro Tanaka, a cancer researcher formerly at Kyushu University in Japan, fidgeted with Western blots, Northern blots, and gel shift assay images by duplicating bands in the results of three papers published from 2000 to 2002.

The dodgy studies stem from work done from 1996 to 1998 when Tanaka was a visiting postdoc in Yoshihiko Yamada's lab at the NIDCR investigating transcriptional regulation of type II and type XI collagen genes in mouse and rat cells.
339名無しゲノムのクローンさん:2009/02/19(木) 08:02:39
The fudged figures were included in one paper in the Journal of Biological Chemistry (JBC) in 2000
(with Tanaka as a middle author), which identified a cartilage-specific enhancer in the first intron of
the collagen gene, Col11a2, and has been cited 43 times according to ISI, and two papers in
Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB) in 2000 and 2002 (with Tanaka as the first author), which
characterized zinc finger factors that negatively regulate cartilage-specific expression of Col11a2
and another collagen gene, Col2a1, and have been cited 39 and 18 times, respectively.

In 2006, the papers' authors issued a correction for the problematic figure in the JBC study and
retracted figures in both MCB papers, although the authors maintain that they stand by the basic
results of the papers. "Some figures needed to be corrected, but overall the conclusions I still feel are
correct," Yamada told The Scientist.

Yamada learned of the image manipulations after someone in his lab noticed that some of the
figures looked "very strange," he said. When Yamada questioned Tanaka about the figures, he was
told that a "personal friend" in Japan carried out the experiments. Although Yamada was given the
friend's name, neither he nor the NIH investigators could locate her.
340名無しゲノムのクローンさん:2009/02/19(木) 08:04:02
The NIH's Office of Intramural Research conducted an inquiry from January to June 2005 in which a
committee interviewed Tanaka in person in the US with the help of a translator. "[Tanaka] claimed
that somebody else had done all the fabrication," Joan Schwartz, the NIH's intramural research
integrity officer, told The Scientist. "To be honest, we don't know that there ever was such a person."
The inquiry committee tentatively concluded that Tanaka was guilty of misconduct, although they
couldn't prove it, Schwartz said. "We ended the case at the point thinking we couldn't go any
further."

The committee sent its findings to the ORI, which probed the datasets and concluded that the image
manipulations were carried out during Tanaka's time at the NIDCR, not in Japan. The NIH then
established a formal investigation from January to August 2007, at which time Tanaka returned to
the US with a lawyer for another interview. "We finally concluded that, yes, it had been he who had
committed most of the misconduct," said Schwartz.

Although certain figures have already been corrected or retracted, Schwartz said she is now working
with Yamada to completely retract the two MCB papers, and to correct one more figure in the JBC
paper. "Now that we have the [ORI's] final findings, I'm working with [Yamada] to sort out the final
wording to send to the journals to say that the [MCB] papers should be retracted," she said.
341名無しゲノムのクローンさん:2009/02/19(木) 08:04:38
Tanaka, who holds both a PhD and an MD, was working at Kyushu University together with Yukihide
Iwamoto, and published papers as recently as January, but according to Yamada he has since moved
to a private clinic in the Kumamoto Prefecture of Kyushu Island and is no longer conducting
research. Tanaka and Iwamoto did not respond to email requests for interviews from The Scientist.

According to the ORI report, Tanaka acknowledged that original data relating to the falsified figures
were missing, though he did not admit misconduct. As part of the settlement agreement, Tanaka is
barred from performing research funded by US taxpayers until 2012.