Nature 435, 718-719 (9 June 2005) | doi: 10.1038/435718a
Chemistry society goes head to head with NIH in fight over public database
Emma Marris, Washington DC
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Abstract
Free molecule registry triggers the wrath of a larger, fee-based effort.
Many chemists might not know it, but the organization that represents them in
the United States is fighting to limit their free access to chemical
information. The American Chemical Society says that a new publicly funded
database of molecules threatens its own fee-based Chemical Abstracts Service
(CAS), and it is lobbying politicians to restrict the free version. But it is
having trouble convincing members that this is in their interests.
CAS is part of many chemists' daily routine. The service is a massive
registry of chemicals with their structures and properties, as well as links
to related publications and patents.
Depending on their size, chemistry departments and companies pay from a few
thousand to more than a hundred thousand dollars for a year's access to the
database.
Chemists have had no alternative. A journal search will not find a chemical
structure, so the database is the only way to find previously reported
molecules and reactions, short of wading through papers by hand.
"CAS is very important," says Chris Reed, an inorganic chemist at the
University of California, Riverside. "My students use it all the time, for
mining the literature or finding the compounds they want."
PubChem, a free database launched by the US National Institutes of Health
(NIH) last September, threatens CAS's monopoly. It is smaller, containing
650,000 molecules so far compared with CAS's 25 million. And it is aimed more
at biologists, linking to information such as gene sequences, and related
papers in the NIH's PubMed archive of biomedical journals.
650,000 and rising
But it is growing. On 25 May, records were added from NMRShiftDB, a database
of chemicals' nuclear magnetic resonance spectra, and from Nature Chemical
Biology, which requires all authors to submit their data to PubChem. Other
sources are likely to follow.
The ACS argues that projects that compete with the private sector are a waste
of taxpayers' money. The database generates the lion's share of the
non-profit ACS's income of $375 million, which pays for the society's
publications, meetings and staff.
So the society is trying to persuade Congress to make the NIH restrict its
database to molecules found by NIH researchers.
Steve Bryant, project director for PubChem, says that's unfair, because the
linked content provided by the two databases is different, and they serve
different audiences.
Bob Massie, head of CAS, disagrees. "We have been hearing that every chemical
researcher understands that PubChem is a substitute for CAS," he says.
To try to limit PubChem to information produced by NIH researchers, the ACS
has been working with lawmakers in Ohio, where CAS employs almost 1,300
people. In particular, it has lobbied congressman Ralph Regula (Republican,
Ohio), the chairman of the appropriations subcommittee that allocates money
to the NIH.
The society's efforts have intensified ahead of this week's expected debut of
the 2006 House Appropriations bill that outlines the agency's proposed
budget. As Nature went to press, the draft bill was due on 9 June. An
official report accompanying the bill was expected to ask the NIH to limit
PubChem to data produced by its own efforts. The report is not legally
binding, but if the bill is passed it would be difficult for the NIH to
ignore.
Although many chemists are unaware of the ACS's attempt to restrict PubChem,
weblogs and library discussion groups have picked up the subject. The fight
is turning sour. "My only interpretation of the ACS's recent actions is that
it is no longer trying to represent the best interests of the scientists who
form its membership," says Richard Roberts, a chemist at New England Biolabs
in Beverly, Massachusetts, and 1993 Nobel laureate, who advises PubChem.
"Rather, it seems to be a commercial enterprise whose principal objective is
to accumulate money." To protest, he has pulled out of an upcoming ACS
conference in India.
Roberts and the NIH are spreading misinformation, responds Madeleine Jacobs,
executive director of the ACS. She complains that NIH staffers have implied
that the ACS is trying to shut PubChem down. "We do not and never have
opposed the concept of publishing data generated by NIH grantees," she says.
"But what we are seeing now goes far beyond what the NIH first proposed."
Jacobs points out that most of the money raised from CAS goes towards the
society's publishing services, and that these would be jeopardized if profits
fell. ACS members she has spoken to agree that PubChem is a waste of public
money, she adds.
Offshore option
Not everyone agrees. "Most of the members I've spoken to are kind of upset
about it," says Reed. He is drafting a letter to Chemical & Engineering News,
an ACS publication, to complain about the society's actions. Although he
doesn't use PubChem himself, he objects to any attempt to squash it. "I can
understand the society being nervous about competition, but I think something
that is complementary and even a bit competitive is healthy."
He says that he and his colleagues would like to see the ACS be "more forward
and innovative in opening access to databases and literature". The University
of California is disseminating information on the quarrel to its chemists,
along with suggestions for action, and Regula's phone number.
Meanwhile, a group of European chemists, including Peter Murray Rust of the
University of Cambridge, UK, is taking a different approach. Worried that
researchers elsewhere would lose out if information is removed from the NIH
site, they are discussing setting up a European-funded mirror of the site
with PubChem, which the US government would have no power to restrict.
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