Parts of Peter Lawrence?s work have been duplicated without citation. What would have happened, one might well ask, if the work had not merely been duplicated, but actually copied or plagiarized, with text lifted verbatim and published in a top science journal? \n\nWould Lawrence have managed to persuade the journal to perform a retraction? Would the journal have agreed to publish a review authored by him (to make amends), when such a review would clearly end up casting serious doubts about the quality of the journal?s editorial and reviewing processes, while also damaging its image immensely? \n\nAre journals bereft of the collective ego that human beings possess individually, in ample amounts?\n\nBelow, with a few paragraphs of background information, I describe a personal experience describing what happened to us after some work we published in 2004 was plagiarized and published in a top science journal in 2007. We complained, and there was some (if not altogether satisfactory) remedial action. \n\nThose who wish to see details of what happened - in the form of highlighted versions of the PDFs of the original and plagiarizing papers, and the correspondence with the journal, - can write to me at pg-at-imtech.res.in. \n\nFor those who are not interested in the details, the story below sheds light on at least one possible scenario providing answers to the questions posed above. \n\nIn 2003-2004, we discovered a novel fluorescence in proteins. Considering that ? as everyone knows ? only tryptophan, tyrosine, phenylalanine, certain cofactors (e.g., FAD) and intrinsic chromophores (e.g., GFP) are known to fluoresce in proteins, we were greatly excited. \n\nWe tracked the fluorescence down to loosely held electrons in peptide bonds (the same electrons that are delocalized from their nucleus into the peptide bond?s molecular orbitals, giving peptide bonds their resonant, partially double-bonded character). These already-delocalized electrons appeared to have become further delocalized through hydrogen-bond formation accompanying protein folding (i.e., through the formation of secondary structures such as helices and sheets). In the bargain, in addition to their known absorption in the range of 190-230 nm, the peptide bonds had become amenable to low-energy, long-wavelength ultraviolet excitation (350-400 nm), with consequent visible emission of blue light (400-500 nm). \n\nWhy had no one found it before? Maybe, it was because no one had looked. Anyway, we found that the fluorescence showed variations in the wavelength of maximal emission with changes in secondary structure, consistent with a peptide-based origin for such a novel fluor. Confident that these electrons would be capable of tunneling through networks of peptide bonds and hydrogen bonds, we predicted ? very explicitly - that proteins must conduct electricity ? and therefore end up becoming extremely useful materials in opto-electronics. \n\nWe submitted the paper to many of the top science journals of the world, failed to get them to review our work, and then gradually worked our way down the ladder ? facing much prejudice, and scathing comments, along the way -until finally Arch. Biochem. Biophys. (ABB), to their immense credit, accepted and published the paper. The details are as given below. \n\nShukla, A. et al (2004). A novel UV laser-induced visible blue radiation from proteins : Scattering artefacts or fluorescence transitions of peptide electrons delocalized through hydrogen bonding ? Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 428, 144-153.\n\nSome research groups asked us why we?d published the work in ABB and not in Nature/Science, if indeed what we were reporting was true. Well, what could we say? That we had knocked at the doors of many well-known journals, and failed to get them to send our paper for review? That we had faced what we thought could be an inherent address bias, because few people had heard of the ?Institute of Microbial Technology? where I work? After all, there are enough people who naively believe that these things do not happen. So, we just kept quiet, and went back to doing the other exciting things that we were doing, after publishing our work in ABB. \n\nThen, in 2007, a group from Europe reported in Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA that proteins fluoresce and also conduct electricity through a common underlying phenomenon involving the peptide bond. The details are as given below. \n\nDel Mercato et al. (2007). Charge transport and intrinsic fluorescence in amyloid-like fibrils. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 104, 18019-24. \n \nOur first reaction was pure and innocent delight. Aha?we thought, our discovery was important enough, after all, to have appeared in a top science journal.\n\nRushing to examine whether they?d cited us, we found to our shock and horror that we had not been cited. In hindsight, of course, we realized that if these authors had cited us, then PNAS would probably never have published their paper in the first place. \n\nWhat shocked us more than our not being cited was the fact that the editing and review process at PNAS had worked so shoddily that no one at the journal had bothered to verify the authors? claims of novelty, whereas only two minutes of searching on PUBMED would have revealed to anyone that the results were not original. Much as the top journals claim that they desire to publish only novel work, it is sad but true that this desire is not necessarily backed up by the drive, or the ability, to truly verify either novelty, or importance. \n\nWhat shocked us much more than the shoddiness of the editorial and reviewing processes at PNAS was the fact that the authors had not only re-done every experiment that we?d done (except one) with a different experimental system, they had actually copied language from our paper in ABB, INCLUDING SOME STRETCHES THAT WERE COPIED VERBATIM, especially in the sections that attempted to explain how the fluorescence and the electrical conduction were related. We were dumbfounded at their audacity. What were they thinking, in this age of the internet ?.that they wouldn?t be found out?. Or that no one would listen to a group from the ?Institute of Microbial Technology?? \n\nBut more than all of the above, what shocked us the most of all was this : We are usually asked to give an arm and a leg, in terms of experiments and explanations, for everything that we happen to claim in any of our papers. On the other hand, these guys who?d plagiarized our work had gotten away without either having to explain how they happened to have made the observations that they claimed to have made (i.e., explain why they had looked for a novel fluorescence, or for electrical conduction in proteins, in the first place), or indeed even why they thought that a particular (as it turned out, plagiarized) explanation fitted the data. So much for quality control processes !\n\nAnyway, we complained to PNAS, reporting this to be a case of willful plagiarization, and demanding appropriate action. We did get an apology from the editor-in-chief, and an erratum which appeared five months later; today, I think that we managed to get the erratum because the evidence was water-tight. Others taking stronger, and harsher, positions would probably have managed to get PNAS to retract the paper. The erratum was published in April this year. It hasn?t escaped our notice that a retraction of the offending paper would have eliminated from the literature the only published support of our original observation, till date. What an irony ! Anyway, the details of the erratum are as given below. \n\nDel Mercato et al. (2008). Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.105,6208.\n\nBefore PNAS published it, we told PNAS that we did not agree with the language of the erratum, since the offending authors agreed to acknowledge only the discovery of the fluorescence, refusing to make any mention of electrical conduction by proteins. PNAS took the side of the offending authors, and published the version of the erratum that the offending authors were agreeable to publishing, without worrying about what we felt about the whole thing. Note ? this is plagiarization that we?re talking about, and not merely lack of citation. Well, what can we say? \n\nFurther, we had also asked PNAS whether we could publish a letter placing developments in proper perspective, but PNAS simply maintained a studied silence on this issue. \n\nWe have now published further findings on this novel protein fluorescence. Once again, after trying several journals, only ABB accepted and published the paper (details below). \n\nGuptasarma, P. (2008). Solution-state characteristics of the ultraviolet A-induced visible fluorescence from proteins. Archives Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 478, 127-129.\n\nThe delight of having this paper published is perfectly balanced by the prospect of its being ignored by future scientists entering the field, just like the last one was. \n\nWho can guarantee that this one also won?t be plagiarized? Who can guarantee that this one will be seen? \n\nSome of the plagiarizing authors are amongst the most well-known nanotechnology groups in the world. One of the authors (Prof. Tamburro) very honorably broke ranks and dissociated himself from the rest of the group when he came to know what had happened (he had been kept out of the loop), but the remaining authors probably remain incensed even today at our audacity in spoiling their party, since we haven?t had the smallest peep of an apology from anyone other than Tamburro. Of course, it is possible that some of the authors remain unaware of all this... who knows? \n\nThe trouble with science is probably the entry of market forces into the scientific workplace; forces that rank fashion, image and impact factor far above content, just like advertising agencies, banks, production units and other market-driven establishments. \n\nIf this is the scientific environment of the future, one might well ask, why should a journal that cares mainly about maintaining its high impact factor sacrifice what it probably holds to be its right (as a business) to choose only those authors who are likely to get cited (and cite each other), while making everyone else walk the plank, especially if running the journal is just like running a business? \n\nAnd who would contend today that journals are not businesses, with all the mergers of publishing houses going on? What do we all expect, with science and business getting mixed up with each other to such a high degree?. like the proverbial tail of the cow, with its dung, to quote an old colloqial saying in this part of the world.\n\nExtrapolating this line of thinking to its logical conclusion, it probably follows that when there are enough scientific 'glitterati' (the page three people of science) on a particular continent who can sustain a highly-ranked journal and keep its impact factor high, naturally scientists from other continents who do not travel to the usual watering holes where such glitterati congregate periodically, will get ignored either subconsciously or consciously, and sometimes with impunity. \n\nSuch things always begin with those who are at the periphery. But everybody forgets that the periphery keeps getting redefined. Nobody is immune to this; not even highly reputed researchers in England?s best universities, it seems. I am shocked. What are things coming to? It is like a variation of the old saying ?When they came to arrest the ?? I thought 'Well, they haven?t come for me'. Now they?ve come for me?. and others who are not directly affected feel about my current plight like I once did about the plight of others?. Hegemony, at all levels, does this. \n\nI am 42 years old. I have had six experiences of this sort already, i.e., papers being deliberately ignored even when they actually have described, proposed, or reported something important (important, at least to me), for the very first time in the world. I have authored only 40 papers (35 as a corresponding author) so far. Those with papers numbering in the hundreds have probably faced many more such instances. \n\nThe practice of science is still the most exciting thing that a human being can do, but I am not sure that young people can survive on the fulfillment that comes from understanding alone, like the middle-aged people of my generation (and preceding generations) have somehow managed to do, in this fast-changing world. \n\nIf science doesn?t get its house in order soon, we may very soon find young people (even those with the right abilities) opting for alternative careers? including, ironically, careers as the very editors who play the journal market because their jobs depend on it. \n\nPurnananda Guptasarma\nInstitute of Microbial Technology, Chandigarh, India \n