Los Angeles Times

Salk Institute researcher loses journal editorship

Scientist implicated in growing controvers­y over how the center treats female faculty.

- By Gary Robbins gary.robbins@sduniontri­bune.com Robbins writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

LA JOLLA — A renowned cancer expert at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies has been ousted as editor of one of the world’s top science journals after being implicated in a deepening controvers­y over how the center treats female faculty.

Inder Verma confirmed to the San Diego UnionTribu­ne that he has been placed on temporary leave as editor of the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), effective Jan. 1.

He said the move stems from lawsuits that Salk professors Vicky Lundblad, Katherine Jones and Beverly Emerson separately filed in July, alleging that the institute systemical­ly discrimina­tes against women in pay, promotions and access to grants and potential donors.

Salk President Elizabeth Blackburn has said the allegation­s are untrue, but the lawsuits apparently factored in her decision to announce last week that she will retire as president late next summer, after barely two and a half years on the job.

Earlier, Ted Waitt, chairman of the board of trustees, also unexpected­ly announced that he was retiring.

Blackburn, a Nobel laureate, could not be reached for comment about a controvers­y that has overshadow­ed the research the Salk Institute does on cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s and other diseases. The institute’s achievemen­ts include helping to develop the cancer drug Gleevec.

The controvers­y also has raised questions about whether the allegation­s will make it difficult for the Salk Institute to recruit highqualit­y scientists and executives.

Verma has been a bit more public about recent events.

He told the Union-Tribune that he sent an email to the editorial board of PNAS that states: “I am writing to let you know that the NAS Council has decided to place me on temporary leave as editor in chief of the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, effective January 1, 2018 and until the resolution of the employment-related lawsuits filed against the Salk Institute of Biological Studies, where I am a professor.

“Being part of the NAS family and having the privilege of serving as the PNAS editor in chief have been among the great honors of my career.

“As you can imagine, the council’s decision saddens me deeply, particular­ly because the lawsuits have nothing to do with my work with NAS and I am not named individual­ly for any claim.

“That said, I recognize the sensitivit­ies present in this current environmen­t and have far too much esteem for NAS to risk the possibilit­y that events related to Salk would in any way distract from the Academy’s extraordin­ary work, so I will gracefully step aside. I very much look forward to working with you all again, hopefully soon.”

Lundblad did mention Verma in her lawsuit, saying that he was one of the leaders who made it difficult for women to succeed at the Salk Institute. At the time, Verma told the Union-Tribune that he was not aware that a lawsuit had been filed.

Verma, 70, joined the Salk faculty in the 1970s and rose to internatio­nal acclaim, notably for his insights about oncogenes, which have the potential to cause cancer. His basic research has helped advance gene therapy, which involves altering a person’s DNA to prevent or treat disease. Gene therapy is one of the hottest fields in science and medicine.

His expertise in genetics and cancer is among the reasons he was appointed editor of PNAS, which is more than a century old and was previously edited by people who had, or would, win the Nobel Prize, including Linus Pauling, Robert Millikan, Randy Schekman and Wendell Stanley.

Verma became the journal’s editor in 2011 and has held the position while continuing to run his genetics laboratory.

He said he has been largely unaware of many of the changes that have been occurring at the Salk Institute lately.

“Both Dr. Blackbursn` and Ted Waitt’s decision for unexpected retirement were as much a surprise to me as perhaps to you or others,” Verma said in an email. “I have had no chance to talk to either one of them, so your guess [about why they’re leaving] is as good as mine.”

 ?? Eduardo Contreras U-T ?? INDER VERMA isa leading cancer specialist.
Eduardo Contreras U-T INDER VERMA isa leading cancer specialist.

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