TY - JOUR
T1 - Detect, correct, retract
T2 - How to manage incorrect structural models
AU - Wlodawer, Alexander
AU - Dauter, Zbigniew
AU - Porebski, Przemyslaw J.
AU - Minor, Wladek
AU - Stanfield, Robyn
AU - Jaskolski, Mariusz
AU - Pozharski, Edwin
AU - Weichenberger, Christian X.
AU - Rupp, Bernhard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Federation of European Biochemical Societies
PY - 2018/2
Y1 - 2018/2
N2 - The massive technical and computational progress of biomolecular crystallography has generated some adverse side effects. Most crystal structure models, produced by crystallographers or well-trained structural biologists, constitute useful sources of information, but occasional extreme outliers remind us that the process of structure determination is not fail-safe. The occurrence of severe errors or gross misinterpretations raises fundamental questions: Why do such aberrations emerge in the first place? How did they evade the sophisticated validation procedures which often produce clear and dire warnings, and why were severe errors not noticed by the depositors themselves, their supervisors, referees and editors? Once detected, what can be done to either correct, improve or eliminate such models? How do incorrect models affect the underlying claims or biomedical hypotheses they were intended, but failed, to support? What is the long-range effect of the propagation of such errors? And finally, what mechanisms can be envisioned to restore the validity of the scientific record and, if necessary, retract publications that are clearly invalidated by the lack of experimental evidence? We suggest that cognitive bias and flawed epistemology are likely at the root of the problem. By using examples from the published literature and from public repositories such as the Protein Data Bank, we provide case summaries to guide correction or improvement of structural models. When strong claims are unsustainable because of a deficient crystallographic model, removal of such a model and even retraction of the affected publication are necessary to restore the integrity of the scientific record.
AB - The massive technical and computational progress of biomolecular crystallography has generated some adverse side effects. Most crystal structure models, produced by crystallographers or well-trained structural biologists, constitute useful sources of information, but occasional extreme outliers remind us that the process of structure determination is not fail-safe. The occurrence of severe errors or gross misinterpretations raises fundamental questions: Why do such aberrations emerge in the first place? How did they evade the sophisticated validation procedures which often produce clear and dire warnings, and why were severe errors not noticed by the depositors themselves, their supervisors, referees and editors? Once detected, what can be done to either correct, improve or eliminate such models? How do incorrect models affect the underlying claims or biomedical hypotheses they were intended, but failed, to support? What is the long-range effect of the propagation of such errors? And finally, what mechanisms can be envisioned to restore the validity of the scientific record and, if necessary, retract publications that are clearly invalidated by the lack of experimental evidence? We suggest that cognitive bias and flawed epistemology are likely at the root of the problem. By using examples from the published literature and from public repositories such as the Protein Data Bank, we provide case summaries to guide correction or improvement of structural models. When strong claims are unsustainable because of a deficient crystallographic model, removal of such a model and even retraction of the affected publication are necessary to restore the integrity of the scientific record.
KW - Protein Data Bank
KW - electron density
KW - error detection
KW - evidence-based scientific discovery
KW - structure validation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85035216855
U2 - 10.1111/febs.14320
DO - 10.1111/febs.14320
M3 - Article
C2 - 29113027
AN - SCOPUS:85035216855
SN - 1742-464X
VL - 285
SP - 444
EP - 466
JO - FEBS Journal
JF - FEBS Journal
IS - 3
ER -