Embattled Japanese researcher Haruko Obokata says she will resign
Haruko Obokata accused of fabrication as she failed to repeat results of a study on stem cells

A researcher embroiled in a fabrication scandal that has rocked Japan's scientific establishment said yesterday that she would resign after failing to reproduce results of what has once been billed as a ground-breaking study on stem cells.
Haruko Obokata said she was dismayed that new laboratory tests have not been able to repeat her experiments, which she had claimed showed the successful conversion of an adult cell into a stem cell-like state. Her original findings turned her into a media sensation in Japan.
"I am keenly aware of my responsibility for troubling a number of people because of my inexperience," Obokata said in a statement.
"I even can't find the words for an apology," said Obokata, who has avoided media exposure since her last, tearful, news conference in April.
Her resignation came as Japan's Riken Institute formally announced that so-called "Stap" cells cannot be re-created, apparently drawing a line under the controversial study.
"We have conducted verification experiments but can't repeat the Stap phenomenon," team leader Shinichi Aizawa told a news conference.