Researcher committed misconduct “recklessly,” says investigation

American Journal of Physiology Renal PhsyiologyA physiology journal has retracted a paper after an institutional investigation found that portions of the work had been falsified by the first author.

According to the notice issued by the American Journal of Physiology – Renal Physiology (AJP), the last author initiated the investigation at the University of Houston in Texas, which found the first author — Mousa Abkhezr — to be guilty of falsifying and duplicating images. 

We’ve obtained a copy of the investigation report, which concluded that Abkhezr committed misconduct “recklessly,” and the paper must be retracted. Although the report noted that Abkhezr argued that the problems stemmed from an honest error, the investigation committee ruled that data from the retracted paper cannot be included in his doctoral thesis.

The last author told us there is a separate ongoing “academic honesty enquiry” into Abkhezr’s dissertation. 

Here’s the retraction notice:

Pleiotropic signaling evoked by tumor necrosis factor in podocytes. Abkhezr M, Kim EY, Roshanravan H, Nikolos F, Thomas C, Hagmann H, Benzing T, Dryer SE. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 309: F98–F108, 2015.

A research misconduct investigation at the University of Houston initiated by Dr. S. E. Dryer has determined that portions of this work have been falsified. Specifically, the STAT3 blots in Figs. 2D, 4A, and 5A were previously published in the journal Molecular Pharmacology (Abkhezr M and Dryer, SE, Mol Pharmacol 87: 231–239, February 2015) as Figs. 1, B and D, and were improperly used to represent results from a separate set of experiments.

The β-actin blots in Figs. 3, A and B, and 9B are duplicates, as are the β-actin blots in Figs. 4, A and B, and 5A, and were improperly used to represent results from a separate set of experiments.

Therefore, this article is being retracted by the American Physiological Society in agreement with the authors.

The 2015 AJP paper has so far been cited once, according to Thomson Reuters Web of Science. And the 2014 Molecular Pharmacology paper, “STAT3 Regulates Steady-State Expression of Synaptopodin in Cultured Mouse Podocytes,” has so far gathered three citations.

Last author of the paper, Stuart Dryer from the University of Houston, told us:

I was initially contacted by the American Journal of Physiology paper shortly after the abstract had appeared in PubMed that their image analyses indicated that portions of figures in the retracted article had been used in a previous paper on which Abkhezr was first author that had recently appeared in Molecular Pharmacology and which also dealt with STAT3 signaling.

He added:

As soon as I saw the results of their analysis, which convinced me instantly that there were very serious issues, I immediately contacted our [Research Integrity Officer] (RIO) and requested the he put together a committee to investigate. I also contacted all of our co-authors, as well as my west coast colleague who had offered a position to Mousa Abkhezr as a postdoctoral fellow on the basis of my recommendation.

According to Dryer, the colleague thanked him and immediately contacted his human resources department to withdraw the job offer.

Dryer said his feelings on the issue range from “extreme shame,” “guilt” and “anger,” adding:

I would not wish this on my worst enemy.

Dryer sent us the RIO’s report, and gave us permission to make it available. It concludes:

The STAT3 blots are irrefutably the same as those previously published in the Molecular Pharmacology paper and are improperly represented in the AJP manuscript as a separate set of experiments conducted with different treatments. In addition, the β-actin blots are duplicates as alleged.

In the report, Abkhezr claims that duplicating images from the Molecular Pharmacology paper was a “mistake;” that he “lost track of all the bands” and did not always label them. It goes further to say:

The committee carefully considered Dr Abkhezr’s statements that using these control bands was an honest error and has no strong evidence to support the falsification as intentional, however when combined with the fact that similar errors occurred in nine separate figures within the manuscript, the committee believes that the misconduct rises to the level of having been committed recklessly.

In the report, Abkhezr further claimed that the lack of emphasis on managing and labeling data in his laboratory amidst juggling multiple research projects and teaching meant that he could not “keep up good practices.” The report added:

In his response to the committee, Dr Abkhezr provided the committee with .pdf versions of two additional blots, labeled “WB DATA” and “DATA.” He explained that these bands were from different experiments and not duplicated, and should be reviewed in response to allegations 1.b. and 1.c. Unfortunately, these images have no dates on them, are not labeled, and do not in any way identify the experiment run or the context in which they were run. For this reason the committee is unable to consider these blots as additional information related to this investigation. This further exemplifies the poor data management practices of Dr. Abkhezr and the reckless nature of the misconduct.

Although there have been no allegations of misconduct against the Molecular Pharmacology paper, the report recommends that Dryer “thoroughly review” its original data “to determine if it, too, should be retracted.”

Rich Dodenhoff, journals director at the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), which publishes Molecular Pharmacology, told us it will look into the situation.

The report notes that Dryer has now adopted digital laboratory archiving and new standards on how to maintain original x-ray films and annotations in hard-bound notebooks. But the image manipulation was not one that could easily be spotted with the naked eye; it needed a “digital analysis,” Dryer told us.

The now-retracted article was submitted around the time Abkhezr also handed in his doctoral dissertation, which, Dryer told us, had the “same research integrity issues.” As a result, Abkhezr has yet to receive his degree, Dryer said: 

The problems in the immunoblots were not noticed by me or by anyone else at the time he defended his dissertation, or during the review of the manuscript. Because these data are part of his dissertation there is a separate academic honesty enquiry that is going on, which will pertain to awarding of the degree, and which will ensure that the dissertation is never published.

Dryer noted:

The fact that this happened and I didn’t catch it proves that I was not vigilant enough. I had no suspicions that this student could do something like this. I should have. In retrospect, there were several red flags, including his developing tendency to work mainly at night. It has changed my management style.

Dryer has issued two previous corrigenda (1,2) for image-related problems in papers that do not include Abkhezr as a co-author.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Abkhezr is still based at the University of Houston, but we were unable to obtain current contact information for him. We’ll update the post with anything else we learn.

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18 thoughts on “Researcher committed misconduct “recklessly,” says investigation”

  1. I don’t understand, why doesn’t the University of Houston in Texas just throw out this individual? Why waste so much time and resources on an individual who they already proved cooked his figures? There should be zero tolerance for this and serious consequences. Individuals who cheat so early in their careers will likely continue to cheat throughout their careers, so why give a chance to risk this? Give an honest undergrad a fair chance instead!

    1. UH is a public uni, and there can be burdensome procedures for getting rid of people at such. Avoiding lawsuits has unfortunately become part of the job of running any institution of higher ed these days. I imagine whatever resources they are directing toward a thorough investigation are meant to avoid the potential for a more costly and time-consuming lawsuit.

      In any case, the conclusion seems obvious, but he deserves due process nonetheless. Whether intentional (which seems most likely) or due to sloppiness, he probably doesn’t deserve a PhD.

  2. A minor point, but just to be correct, this is not cancer research, nor are Mousa Abkhezr or Dryer cancer researchers. The correct description is renal physiology.

  3. Another case of a completely innocent PI being backstabbed by a devious graduate student with no possibility at all for realizing that anything was wrong.

    1. It does seem that image-related problems have occurred before in the innocent PIs lab “Dryer has issued two previous corrigenda (1,2) for image-related problems in papers that do not include Abkhezr as a co-author.”

  4. “In retrospect, there were several red flags, including his developing tendency to work mainly at night”
    As a side note when I was a student (a long time ago) due to insurance issues (as “students” by definition are not fully trained) we were not allowed to work in the lab alone. I suspect this is also true of the University this individual attended (?).

  5. Mol Pharmacol. 2015 Feb;87(2):231-9. doi: 10.1124/mol.114.094508. Epub 2014 Nov 25.
    STAT3 regulates steady-state expression of synaptopodin in cultured mouse podocytes.
    Abkhezr M1, Dryer SE2.
    Author information
    1Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas (M.A., S.E.D.); and Division of Nephrology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (S.E.D.).
    2Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas (M.A., S.E.D.); and Division of Nephrology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (S.E.D.)

    PMID: 25425624

    Figures 2A and 4A.
    http://imgur.com/1q4wVhi

    1. 2016 retraction notice.
      http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/90/3/161.full

      Mol Pharmacol. 2015 Feb;87(2):231-9. doi: 10.1124/mol.114.094508. Epub 2014 Nov 25.
      STAT3 regulates steady-state expression of synaptopodin in cultured mouse podocytes.
      Abkhezr M1, Dryer SE2.
      Author information
      1Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas (M.A., S.E.D.); and Division of Nephrology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (S.E.D.).
      2Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Houston, Houston, Texas (M.A., S.E.D.); and Division of Nephrology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas (S.E.D.)

  6. Whereas the grad student may have falsified the results, I think the PI is also culpable in not reviewing the results before submission and publication. The PI should have picked up the discrepancies, especially seeing that they “to the level of having been committed recklessly.”

    1. This could happen to a lot of us, though, don’t you think? In my area, I am able to easily reproduce student results before publication, and this is something I generally do before letting them graduate. However, in other fields, this isn’t always possible. If the image duplication wasn’t “visible to the naked eye,” I don’t find the PI especially culpable for not noticing it. Lack of enforcement for records keeping, though, is on him in this situation.

      1. I would agree with you that it is not always possible to reproduce the student’s results. However, I would like to think that the PI would at least go through the results carefully, review them, and where possible also inspect the primary data. That is a responsibility that a PI cannot get away from.
        But I agree with you on the fact that, in this case, the misconduct may have been a bit difficult for the PI to detect.
        Years ago when I was doing my PhD, my supervisor used to consistently ask for chromatograms and spectra and such. I think for the most part this was to ensure that things were done properly (dating, labelling, archiving, etc).

  7. The phrasing “…the committee believes that the misconduct rises to the level of having been committed recklessly” is unfortunate. By definition, misconduct is reckless. Is there such a thing as non-reckless misconduct?

  8. Besides the emphasis on recklessness… if someone says that he “lost track of all the bands” and did not always label them, that ought to be enough reason to withdraw the paper.

    I am sure that honest researchers know how hard it is to do research, and how much effort it takes to assemble data for a meaningful paper. Being able to keep track of the various bands is, like, step 0. It’s not easy; as the saying goes, nothing worthwhile is easy.

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