Thursday, October 18, 2007

More Restricted Access to Journal Articles

 
The press release from the Dept. of Energy Joint Genome Institute (USA) sounds really cool [Massive reanalysis of genome data solves case of the lethal genes].
It is better to be looked over than overlooked, Mae West supposedly said. These are words of wisdom for genome data-miners of today. Data that goes unnoticed, despite its widespread availability, can reveal extraordinary insights to the discerning eye. Such is the case of a systematic analysis by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI) of the massive backlog of microbial genome sequences from the public databases. The survey identified genes that kill the bacteria employed in the sequencing process and throw a microbial wrench in the works. It also offers a possible strategy for the discovery of new antibiotics. These findings are published in the Oct. 19 edition of the journal Science.

In nature, promiscuous microbes share genetic information so readily that using genes to infer their species position on the evolutionary tree of life was thought to be futile. Now, researchers at DOE JGI have characterized barriers to this gene transfer by identifying genes that kill the recipient bacterium upon transfer, regardless of the type of bacterial donor. These lethal genes also provide better reference points for building phylogenic trees—the means to verify evolutionary relationships between organisms.
But it's not true. This article was not published in the Oct. 19 edition of Science. You can see for yourself [Science Oct. 19, 2007].

Instead it was posted on ScienceXpress, Publication ahead of print. Access to those articles is restricted. I can't see them even though the University of Toronto has an excellent system for getting articles from journals. Can anyone else get this article?

This really pisses annoys me. What's the point of putting out a press release if nobody can see the paper?



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