The disgraced South Korean cloning expert, Hwang Woo-suk, has been fired from his professorship at Seoul National University (SNU).
Dr Hwang and six members of his team were suspended from working at SNU last month pending a disciplinary investigation.
The university concluded in January that Dr Hwang had faked some of his famous stem cell research.
Dr Hwang and the six others also face criminal charges over the scandal.
SCANDAL TIMELINE
"The disciplinary committee has decided to fire Hwang and to take punitive action against six other professors," a university spokesman told the French news agency AFP.
Four professors were suspended for up to three months, and two others received a one-month pay cut, AFP reported.
"The professors fundamentally abandoned honesty and sincerity... and caused the fall in the school's honour and the country's international confidence," the university said in a statement.
Dr Hwang's dismissal means he is automatically banned from taking up any government-funded teaching or research for up to five years, the spokesman said.
Prosecutors are expected to wrap up their investigation soon into whether Dr Hwang should also face criminal charges of fraud and embezzlement for the alleged misuse of millions of dollars of funds.
Fabrications
The disgraced scientist caused shockwaves late last year, when he admitted flaws in his research.
He has apologised for the mistakes, but has insisted most of the fabrications were carried out without his knowledge, by collaborators on the project.
A final report from experts at Seoul National University, published in January, said that Dr Hwang had faked his most famous work, the production of a stem cell line taken from cloned embryos.
The panel had previously rejected another of his landmark claims - to have produced individually tailored stem cells.
But it did conclude that Dr Hwang produced the world's first cloned dog, an Afghan hound called Snuppy.
^ Back to top | BBC Sport Home | BBC Homepage | Contact us | Help | ©