收稿范围 |
Molecular cell biology is a marriage of two distinct, yet complementary, disciplines. In its traditional sense, the term 'molecular biology' refers to study of the macromolecules essential to life — nucleic acids and proteins. The field of cell biology is a natural extension of this, integrating what we know at the molecular level into an understanding of processes and interactions at the cellular level. Only by combining both fields can we paint a broad picture of essential biological processes such as how cells divide, grow, communicate and die.
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology features Reviews, Perspective articles and Comments on a broad range of topics, and highlights important primary papers and technological progress.
Reviews, Perspectives and Comments are commissioned by the editorial team.
The scope of the journal includes:
Cell signalling (signalling networks, ion channels, gap junctions)
Membrane dynamics (membrane organization, endocytosis, exocytosis, organelle biogenesis)
Cell adhesion (adhesion molecules, extracellular matrix)
Cytoskeletal dynamics (cell motility, molecular motors, actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments)
Developmental and stem cell biology
Cell growth and division (cell cycle, cytokinesis, cancer)
Cell death (apoptosis, necrosis, autophagy, ageing)
Cellular microbiology (host–pathogen interactions)
Plant cell biology
Gene expression (transcription, splicing, RNA stability, translation, RNA interference, circadian rhythms)
Nucleic-acid metabolism (DNA repair, recombination and replication, RNA biogenesis)
Chromosome biology and nuclear architecture (chromatin, chromosome structure, transposons)
Nuclear transport (import and export of molecules to and from the nucleus)
Protein structure and metabolism (structure-function relationships, quality control, post-translational modifications, folding, translocation, degradation)
Bioenergetics (respiration, photosynthesis, organelle biochemistry)
Technology and techniques (imaging, proteomics, systems biology, bioinformatics) |
编辑信息 |
Chief Editor: Kim Baumann, Ph.D. ORCiDKim Baumann carried out her Ph.D. and postdoctoral research at the John Innes Centre in Norwich, UK. She first studied the molecular mechanisms underlying changes in plant cell shape in the laboratories of Cathie Martin and Keith Roberts. She then pursued her interest in plant development in Desmond Bradley's group, working on genes that regulate the transition from vegetative growth to flowering. Before moving into science publishing, she contributed to the setting up of the Sainsbury Laboratory in Cambridge, UK. Kim joined the Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology team in 2009 after two years as the Editor of the Cell Migration Gateway. She has been Chief Editor since 2016. Kim is primarily responsible for the areas of stem cells and developmental biology, cell growth and division, ubiquitin signalling, protein structure and metabolism, as well as plant cell biology. Kim is based in the London office, UK. Senior Editor: Eytan Zlotorynski, Ph.D. ORCiDEytan obtained a Ph.D. in Genetics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, studying the molecular basis of common fragile sites in the human genome, under the guidance of Professor Batsheva Kerem. He then moved to the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam, to work as a Research Fellow with Professor Reuven Agami. His research focused on discovering microRNAs with novel tumorigenic and tumour-suppressive functions. Eytan moved into science publishing and joined Nature Protocols in January 2013. He has been part of the Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology team since 2014. Eytan is primarily responsible for the areas of gene expression, nucleic acid metabolism, chromatin and chromosome biology, and nuclear organization, as well as for technologies and techniques. Eytan is based in the London office, UK. Senior Editor: Paulina Strzyz, Ph.D. ORCiDPaulina Strzyz carried out her Ph.D. at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden, Germany, under the supervision of Dr Caren Norden, investigating cell proliferation in pseudostratified epithelia using the zebrafish retinal neuroepithelium as a model system. She then performed postdoctoral research, studying centrosome amplification in zebrafish epithelia. Paulina joined Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology in 2015. Paulina is primarily responsible for the areas of cell signalling, cytoskeletal dynamics, cell adhesion and migration, cell death, autophagy and membrane dynamics. Paulina is based in the London office, UK.
|