On 2015 Sep 28, George McNamara commented:
I posted this on PubPeer,
https://pubpeer.com/publications/25CC01C366B9593D1686A78B52461F#fb36935
The Briley et al 2015 paper is deficient in methods - what is the length of the new product? what are the design criteria for specificity? how are the spherical nucleic acids constructed? Is there a mechanism by which the flare gets kicked off the SNA? I suggest PNAS explicitly require self contained full methods and materials in manuscripts they accept. The details can be in the supplemental file, and can both provide full details and cite -- or even quote -- earlier work.
The Briley COI statement states: "The authors declare no conflict of interest.". The authors and their University previously commercialized NanoFlare/SmartFlare - is PNAS sure they have not submitted patent applications for Sticky-Flare and intent to make money from it = financial interest. I am fine with commercialization of products, but if this is an advertisement for a future product, the authors should be honest in their COI an PNAS should mark the paper as an advertisement.
Citation for commercialization:
"NanoFlares have been very useful for researchers that operate in the arena of quantifying gene expression. AuraSense, Inc., a biotechnology company that licensed the NanoFlare technology from Northwestern University, and EMD-Millipore, another biotech company, have commercialized NanoFlares. There are now more than 1,700 commercial forms of NanoFlares sold under the SmartFlare name in more than 230 countries."
http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/stories/2015/07/new-tool-for-investigating-rna-gone-awry.html#sthash.GwI4hbRx.dpuf
One of their patents is US8507200B2
https://patents.google.com/patent/US8507200B2/en?q=mirkin&q=nanoflare
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