期刊名称:DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS publishes cutting-edge research in the field of developmental biology, focusing on morphogenesis¡ªthe study of the emergence of form during animal development. The journal includes articles ranging from the theoretical to the analytical, covering all levels of biological organization.
Developmental Dynamics, an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists, provides a focus for communication among developmental biologists who study the emergence of form during animal development. The journal is an international forum for the exchange of novel and significant information gained from analytical and theoretical investigations on the mechanisms that control morphogenesis. Developmental Dynamics seeks manuscripts on work done at all levels of biological organization, ranging from the molecular to the organismal.
Representative topics of Interest Include:
Mechanisms underlying morphogenesis Pattern formation Tissue organization and repair Transcriptional and post-transcriptional controls governing the emergence of diverse biologic form Analytical methods for the visualization of molecular, cytologic, and ultrastructural aspects of dynamic developmental processes Cell-cell signalling and cell-matrix interactions Genetic and molecular probes for the study of cell lineages and developmental pathways Transgenic approaches for studying the control of tissue- and organ-specific gene expression Mathematical models of morphogenetic processes. Readership
Developmental biologists ¡¤ anatomists ¡¤ molecular and cellular biologists ¡¤ biochemists ¡¤ geneticists ¡¤ neurobiologists ¡¤ pathologists ¡¤ physiologists
Keywords
development, morphogenesis, pattern formation, organogenesis, neurogenesis, tissue organization and repair, cell-cell signaling, cell-matrix interactions, transgenic approaches, gene expression, morphogenetic processes, mathematical models, journal, online journal, Wiley InterScience
Abstracting and Indexing Information
BIOSIS Previews, Biological Abstracts Current Contents/Life Sciences Focus On: Veterinary Science and Medicine ISI Alerting Services (includes Research Alert) Reference Update Science Citation Index (ISI) SCISEARCH Database (ISI) |
Instructions to Authors
NIH Public Access Mandate For those interested in the Wiley-Blackwell policy on the NIH Public Access Mandate, please visit our policy statement.
For additional tools visit AuthorResources—an enhanced suite of online tools for WileyInterScience journal authors, featuring Article Tracking, E-mail Publication Alerts and Customized Research Tools.
For information on submitting Copyright Transfer Agreements, please see the section in Author Guidelines.
Author Guidelines
AAA Journals Support Authors Via Submission To PubMed Central
AAA journal authors whose research is funded by NIH will not have to worry about submitting their accepted manuscripts to PubMed Central (PMC). AAA’s publisher, Wiley-Blackwell, will support authors by posting the accepted version of articles by NIH grant-holders to PubMed Central upon acceptance by the journal. The accepted version is the version that incorporates all amendments made during peer review, but prior to the publisher’s copy-editing and typesetting. This accepted version will be made publicly available on PMC 12 months after publication. Developmental Dynamics is already freely available one year following publication on Wiley InterScience.
The NIH public access mandate applies to all articles based on research that has been wholly or partially funded by the NIH and that are accepted for publication on or after April 7, 2008.
In addition to depositing manuscripts on behalf of NIH-funded authors, Wiley has reached an agreement with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) to make post-peer reviewed articles publicly available six months after final publication. HHMI will cover the cost of this service.
For other authors of primary research articles whose funding agency requires earlier public access, Wiley-Blackwell offers a $3,000 funded access option for public availability in PubMed Central and on the journal’s website immediately upon publication. Details are available here.
SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS
Online submission of manuscripts is required at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/dvdy-wiley. Authors should identify their manuscripts as one of seven types: Research Article, Disease Connections, Patterns & Phenotypes, Techniques, Reviews, Book Look (book review), or Shop Talk (meeting review).
Only manuscripts written in acceptable English will be considered. If the author does not have English-writing skills equivalent to that of a native English speaker, the manuscript should be appropriately edited prior to submission to avoid rejection based on unacceptable writing. Manuscripts should be as concise as possible, and submitted manuscripts must be approved by all authors. Manuscripts must be original and must not have been published previously either in whole or in part, except in abstract form, and must not be under consideration by any other journal.
Reviews will be assigned to the Reviews Editor (John F. Fallon; jffallon@facstaff.wisc.edu). Authors interested in submitting a Reviews manuscript should e-mail the Reviews Editor a detailed outline of the proposed review before submitting a complete manuscript. Authors submitting a Reviews manuscript should plan in advance to obtain written copyright release from the publishers of all previously published figures and art work used in their review and include them with the manuscript upon initial submission.
Color figures are published online (and in PDF) in RGB (red, green, blue) color space to ensure that digital colors maintain their vibrancy and are reproduced exactly as submitted by authors. Therefore, all color figures should be submitted in RGB format. Color figures published in the print version will be converted during production to CYMK (cyan, yellow, magenta, black), thus optimizing color for press. This may result in an unavoidable color shift in the printed form. For further details, see http://cpc.cadmus.com/da/guidelines_rgb.asp.
The authors signify by submission of their manuscript to Developmental Dynamics that 1) their studies using animal and human subjects have been approved by the appropriate institutional review boards; and 2) the authors will distribute freely to interested academic researchers biological materials (clones, cell lines, antibodies, mutant animals, etc.) used in the studies that are being reported. For personal communications, permission in writing from the communicator is required to publish the information. All new DNA or RNA sequence data should be submitted to the appropriate database at NCBI (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) or ENA (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena). Authors are required to provide a sequence or dataset identification number with the final manuscript.
For reports of novel protein sequences derived from nucleic acid sequences, authors are required to submit both the protein and the nucleic acid sequences to appropriate data bases and provide accession numbers with the final, accepted manuscript.
Microarray data should also be supplied as Supplementary Material at the time of submission in a MIAME-compliant format (see http://www.mged.org/Workgroups/MIAME/miame.html for more information), together with the completed MIAME checklist. At acceptance we also require that microarray data be submitted to the Gene Expression Omnibus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) or ArrayExpress (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress) databases, with accession numbers made available before publication.
Genetic nomenclature. Gene names should be in italic type, but the protein product of a gene should be in Roman type. Genetic nomenclature should be in accordance with established conventions and should be approved by the relevant nomenclature curator (see following) if applicable.
Caenorhabditis elegans: http://www.wormbase.org
Chicken: http://www.thearkdb.org/nomenclature.html
Drosophila: http://flybase.bio.indiana.edu/docs/nomenclature/lk/nomenclature.html
Human: http://www.genenames.org/index.html
Mouse: http://www.informatics.jax.org/mgihome/nomen/index.shtml
Zebrafish: http://zfin.org/zf_info/nomen.html
FORMAT OF MANUSCRIPTS
Research Articles. These can be of any length, ranging from short communications to comprehensive studies. The manuscript should be organized as follows: Title page (with title, names, and institutional affiliations—to department level—of all the authors; the name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of the corresponding author; running title; key words; and grant information in the following format: Grant Sponsor: ; Grant number .), Abstract (150 words clearly stating the focus and main results of the paper), Introduction, Results, Discussion, Experimental Procedures, Acknowledgments, References, Figure Legends, Footnotes, Tables. With online submission, some of the information listed in these sections (especially on the title page) is also entered into appropriate areas of the online site during the submission process. It is important to include this material as part of your manuscript file (called "main" file in the online site) because referees often view PDFs of your manuscript off-line.
Disease Connections. These highlight research concerning the function of genes implicated in human disease, use of non-human animal models to investigate the etiology of human disorders, and use of a model as a tool for therapeutic drug screening. Disease Connections should be submitted in the format of a Research Article or brief review.
Patterns & Phenotypes. These highlight important descriptive studies, especially those illustrating gene and protein expression patterns, as well as phenotypes resulting from mutagenesis or gene mis-expression. Comprehensive papers comparing expression across multiple animal models, protein and RNA patterns in the same model, or multiple family members in the same model or in multiple models are given the highest priority for publication. Studies describing the expression of a single gene in a single species are not typically accepted for publication. The manuscript should include the same sections as listed above for Research Articles, except that the Results and Discussion may be combined and Experimental Procedures may be replaced with a brief Methods. Gene expression patterns from accepted Patterns & Phenotypes articles (as well as from other article types) will be deposited in non-profit online electronic data repositories when deemed appropriate by the Editorial Board and Publisher and when such databases are available. Repositories provide an important service to the research community and facilitate the exchange and availability of important research information.
Techniques. These highlight important technical advances in the field. The manuscript should include the same sections as listed above for Research Articles, except that Results and Discussion may be combined and Experimental Procedures must be detailed and complete. If it facilitates communication, Results and Experimental Procedures may be combined in a stepwise, recipe fashion. Techniques are typically between 4-6 journal pages (950 words per page), but may be longer if necessary, and typically contain no more than 2 full pages of color illustrations.
Reviews. These can be short perspective-type reviews or longer comprehensive reviews. The manuscript should be organized as follows: Title page (containing the same information as listed above for Research Articles), Body of the review including, if possible, a Short Perspectives or Future Directions section at the end, Acknowledgments, References, Figure Legends, Footnotes, Tables. Reviews (depending on whether they are a perspective-type review or a comprehensive analysis of an area of research) should be between 5 and 20 journal pages (950 words/page) in length.
Book Looks and Shop Talks. Ideas for book reviews (Book Looks) and meeting reviews (Shop Talks) should be discussed with the Editor-in-Chief (Gary C. Schoenwolf; schoenwolf@neuro.utah.edu) prior to the writing and submission of manuscripts. These typically consist of 1-2 printed pages (950 words per printed page) and typically do not have subheadings.
Special Issue Articles. Calls for Special Issue Articles will be issued periodically. The format for these will be dictated by their type, and they may follow the format of a Research Article, Disease Connection, Patterns and Phenotypes, Techniques or Reviews. Please contact the Editorial Office for further details.
Review and Publication
We strive for speedy review and rapid publication of accepted papers. On the average, the first decision on a submitted manuscript occurs within about 3 weeks from submission. Publication online occurs about 6-8 weeks after acceptance, and in print copy about 1 month later. To be considered as a revised manuscript rather than as a new manuscript requiring full review, manuscripts requiring revisions must be resubmitted within three months of the decision date.
OnlineOpen
OnlineOpen is available to authors of primary research articles who wish to make their article available to non-subscribers on publication, or whose funding agency requires grantees to archive the final version of their article. With OnlineOpen, the author, the author's funding agency, or the author's institution pays a fee to ensure that the article is made available to non-subscribers upon publication via Wiley InterScience, as well as deposited in the funding agency's preferred archive. For the full list of terms and conditions, see http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/authorresources/onlineopen.html#OnlineOpen_Terms. Any authors wishing to send their paper OnlineOpen will be required to complete the payment form available from our website at: https://secure.interscience.wiley.com/funded_access.html.
Prior to acceptance there is no requirement to inform an Editorial Office that you intend to publish your paper OnlineOpen if you do not wish to. All OnlineOpen articles are treated in the same way as any other article. They go through the journal's standard peer-review process and will be accepted or rejected based on their own merit.
Movies
Movies should be submitted online in QuickTime 4.0 or higher format; .mpeg and .avi files are also acceptable. All movies should be submitted at the desired reproduction size and length. To avoid excessive delays in downloading the files, movies should be no more than 6MB in size, and run between 30-60 seconds in length. Authors are encouraged to use QuickTime’s “compress” option when preparing files to help control file size. Additionally, cropping frames and image sizes can significantly reduce file sizes. Files submitted can be looped to play more than once, provided file size does not become excessive. Authors will be notified if problems exist with videos as submitted, and will be asked to modify them. No editing will be done to the videos at the editorial office—all changes are the responsibility of the author.
Abbreviation and Units
Use standard abbreviations. Spell out all nonstandard abbreviations the first time used.
Figures and Legends
At acceptance of the manuscript, the authors must submit the final revised version of an accepted manuscript (text, tables, and illustrations) online. Text files must be submitted as .doc or .rtf files. Tables must be submitted as .doc or .rtf files (which can be embedded in the text file) or as separate .xls files. Figures must be submitted as .tif or .eps files. Do not submit PDFs, jpegs, or PowerPoint files. Please select LWZ compression (an option in the "save" process of programs such as Photoshop) when saving your figures. This is a lossless compression routine that reduces the size of your figures without compromising their quality. In addition, authors must examine their figures using Rapid Inspector TM to ensure that they are of sufficiently high quality for publication. Rapid Inspector TM gives authors of scientific, technical, and medical journals a resource for certifying their illustrations prior to submission. Utilizing this software will ensure that your graphics are suitable for print production. To download this journal's free Rapid Inspector software, please visit http://rapidinspector.cadmus.com/RapidInspector/zwi/index.jsp.
Figures should be submitted as electronic images to fit either one (55 mm, 2 3/16”, 13 picas), two (115 mm, 4 1/2”, 27 picas), or three (175 mm, 6 7/8”, 41 picas) columns. The length of an illustration cannot exceed 227 mm (9”). Journal quality reproduction requires grey scale and color files at resolutions of 300 dpi. Bitmapped line art should be submitted at resolutions of 600-1200 dpi. These resolutions refer to the output size of the file; if you anticipate that your images will be enlarged, resolutions should be increased accordingly.
Helvetica typeface is preferred for lettering of illustrations. All letters, numbers and symbols must be at least 2 mm high. Courier typeface should be used for sequence figures. Number figures in one consecutive series with Arabic numerals, and key them into the text. Submit a brief descriptive legend with each illustration, and do not repeat results in figure legends. Legends for each figure should not exceed 200 words. Abbreviations used in figures and legends must match exactly those used in the text. Submission of potential cover photos is encouraged; upon submission, these should be uploaded as a supplemental figure entitled, “cover photo”. A minimum resolution of 300 dpi size of 8.5 × 11” is required for consideration.
To ensure that figures can be interpreted by color blind people, we encourage authors to visit the following website to learn how to adjust their colors accordingly: http://jfly.iam.u-tokyo.ac.jp/color/.
Color Figures
Color figures, when deemed necessary, are published free of charge. Authors are encouraged to group color illustrations onto a single page without sacrificing the clarity of the manuscript. The publisher reserves the right to regroup illustrations and change their size and position to utilize color pages efficiently.
Tables
Each table must have a self-explanatory title, be numbered in order of appearance with Arabic numerals and be cited at an appropriate point in the text. Tables should present comparisons of data that are too cumbersome to describe in the text; they should not merely repeat text information.
References
Wiley’s journal styles are in EndNote. EndNote is a software product that we recommend to our journal authors to help simplify and streamline the research process. Using EndNote’s bibliographic management tools, you can search bibliographic databases, build and organize your reference collection, and then instantly output your bibliography in any Wiley journal style. To download the reference style for this journal, or to purchase a copy of EndNote, go to the following URL: www.interscience.wiley.com/jendnotes.
Reference should be made only to articles that are published or in press. Unpublished results and personal communications should be cited parenthetically in the text, not in the reference list. Authors are responsible for the accuracy of the references. References in the text should be made by author’s name followed by the year of publication, arranged chronologically, then alphabetically. When there are more than two authors, use the first author’s name and et al.
When references are made to more than one paper by the same author, published in the same year, designate them as a, b, c, etc. In the final list, arrange references alphabetically listing all authors, then year of publication. Abbreviate journal names according to Index Medicus, following these examples:
Journal Litingtung Y, Dahn RD, Li Y, Fallon JF, Chiang C. 2002. Shh and Gli3 are dispensable for limb skeleton formation but regulate digit number and identity. Nature 418:979-983.
Book Chapter Kiernan AE, Steel KP, Fekete DM. 2002. Development of the mouse inner ear. In: Rossant J, Tam PPL, editors. Mouse Development. San Diego: Academic Press. p. 539-566.
Book Gilbert SF 2000. Developmental Biology. 5th Edition. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates, Inc. 749 p.
Proofs and Reprints
Upon acceptance of a manuscript for publication in Developmental Dynamics , the author will be required to sign an agreement transferring copyright to the Publisher, who reserves copyright. Please find detailed instructions for our CTA process below.
No published material may be reproduced or published elsewhere without the written permission of the Publisher and the author. The journal will not be responsible for the loss of manuscripts at any time. All statements in, or omissions from, published manuscripts are the responsibility of the authors, who will assist the editorial office and the Publisher by reviewing proofs before publication. Reprints may be ordered at https://caesar.sheridan.com/reprints/redir.php?pub=10089&acro=DVDY.
Copyright Transfer Agreement
We no longer require FAXs or other hardcopy of the Copyright Transfer Agreement (CTA). You can email the scanned and signed CTA form, available in the proof packet, directly to Patrick Snajder at psnajder@wiley.com. IF THE SUBMITTING AUTHOR IS UNABLE TO COMPLETE THE CTA FORM ON BEHALF OF ALL MANUSCRIPT AUTHORS, PLEASE CONTACT THE EDITORIAL OFFICE PRIOR TO SUBMISSION FOR ADVICE. Please note that your manuscript cannot be published until you have submitted a CTA form.
Page Charges
There are no page charges for publication in Developmental Dynamics . View this journal online at www.wiley.com/developmentaldynamics.
Software and Format
Microsoft Word 6.0 (or later) is preferred, although manuscripts prepared with any other microcomputer word processor are acceptable. Refrain from complex formatting; the Publisher will style your manuscript according to the Journal design specifications. Do not use desktop publishing software such as Aldus PageMaker or Quark XPress. If you prepared your manuscript with one of these programs, export the text to a word processing format. Please make sure your word processing program's "fast save" feature is turned off. Please do not deliver files that contain hidden text: for example, do not use your word processor's automated features to create footnotes or reference lists.
Production Questions
Patrick Snajder, Production Editor E-mail: psnajder@wiley.com
Editorial Board
Meet the Editors
EDITOR IN CHIEF Gary C. Schoenwolf Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, and Children's Health Research Center University of Utah School of Medicine 30 North 1900 East Room 2R066 SOM (Bldg. 521) Salt Lake City, UT 84132-3401 Phone: (801) 587-9152 Fax: (801) 581-8852 schoenwolf@neuro.utah.edu
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EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Michelle G. Turner devdyn@hsc.utah.edu
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SCIENCE WRITER Julie C. Kiefer Huntsman Cancer Institute University of Utah School of Medicine Salt Lake City, Utah jkiefer@neuro.uah.edu
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REVIEWS EDITOR John F. Fallon University of Wisconsin Madison, WI jffallon@wisc.edu
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ASSOCIATE EDITORS |
Parker Antin University of Arizona Tucson, AZ pba@u.arizona.edu
Philippa Francis-West King's College London, UK philippa.francis-west@kcl.ac.uk
Hiroshi Hamada Osaka University Osaka, Japan hamada@fbs.osaka-u.ac.jp
Min Han Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of Colorado at Boulder Institute of Developmental Biology and Molecular Medicine at Fudan University mhan@colorado.edu
Ken Irvine Howard Hughes Medical Institute Waksman Institute, Rutgers University Piscataway, NJ irvine@waksman.rutgers.edu
Catherine E. Krull University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI krullc@umich.edu |
Suzanne L. Mansour Eccles Institute of Human Genetics University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT suzi.mansour@genetics.utah.edu
Takashi Mikawa University of California San Francisco San Francisco, CA takashi.mikawa@ucsf.edu
David M. Ornitz Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis, MO dornitz@wustl.edu
Lilianna Solnica-Krezel Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN lilianna.solnica-krezel@vanderbilt.edu
Maria A. Ros Instituto de Biomedicina y Biotecnología de Cantabria (CSIC-UC-IDICAN) Santander, Spain rosm@unican.es
H. Joseph Yost University of Utah School of Medicine Salt Lake City, UT jyost@genetics.utah.edu
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MEMBERS, EDITORIAL BOARD
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Markus Affolter University of Basel
Marie-Andree Akimenko University of Ottawa
Miguel Allende Millennium Nucleus in Developmental Biology Santiago, Chile
Sharon Amacher University of California, Berkeley
Enrique Amaya University of Manchester
Deborah J. Andrew Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Bruce Appel Vanderbilt University
Jeffrey Axelrod Stanford University School of Medicine
David Bader Vanderbilt University
Eric Baehrecke University of Massachusetts Medical School
H. Scott Baldwin Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Joey V. Barnett Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Kate Francesca Barald University of Michigan Medical School
Joey V. Barnett Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Thomas Bartman Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Michael Bastiani University of Utah
David Bilder University of California, Berkeley
Brian Black Cardiovascular Research Institute, UCSF
Steven B. Bleyl University of Utah School of Medicine
Dirk Bohmann University of Rochester Medical Center
Brian Bowerman University of Oregon, Eugene
Michael Brand Dresden Institute of Technology
Thomas Brand Imperial College of London, National Heart and Lung Institute
Philip R. Brauer Creighton University School of Medicine
James Briscoe National Institute for Medical Research, London
Benoit G. Bruneau Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease
Carol A. Burdsal Tulane University
Laura Burrus San Francisco State University
Blanche Capel Duke University Medical Center
Fernando Casares Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain
Susan C. Chapman Clemson University
Ping Chen Emory University School of Medicine
YiPing Chen Tulane University
Chi-Bin Chien University of Utah School of Medicine
Andrew D. Chisholm University of California, San Diego
Ajay Chitnis NIH/NICHD
Simon J. Conway Indiana University School of Medicine
Juan Pablo Couso University of Sussex
Carolyn N. Dealy University of Connecticut Health Center
Wilfred F. Denetclaw San Francisco State University
Chuxia Deng GDDB, NIDDK, National Institutes of Health
Maria Dominguez Universidad Miguel Hernández Alicante, Spain
Richard I. Dorsky University of Utah School of Medicine
Christopher J. Drake Medical University of South Carolina
Gregory Dressler University of Michigan
Steve Duncan Medical College of Wisconsin
Michael A. Dyer St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Suzanne Eaton Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics Dresden, Germany
Carol A. Erickson University of California, Davis
Darrell J.R. Evans Brighton and Sussex Medical School University of Sussex
Steven A. Fisher Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
Sabine Fuhrmann University of Utah School of Medicine
Eileen E. Furlong European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heidelberg
Maureen A. Gannon Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Martín I. García Castro Yale University
Virginio Garcia-Martinez Universidad Extremadura, Facultad de Medicina, Spain
Bob Goldstein University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Marion K. Gordon Rutgers University
Anthony Graham King’s College, London
Jeremy B. A. Green King's College, London
Carol C. Gregorio University of Arizona College of Medicine
Andy Groves Baylor College of Medicine
Sarah Guthrie King's College, London
Jin-Kwan Han Pohang University of Science & Technology, Korea
Jeff Hardin University of Wisconsin, Madison
Richard Harvey St. Vincents Hospital, Sydney, Australia
Carl-Philipp Heisenberg Max-Planck-Institute for Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden
Shigeo Hayashi RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Siegfried Hekimi McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Jill Ann Helms University of California, San Francisco
Mary J. C. Hendrix Children's Memorial Research Center Northwestern University
Michael O. Hengartner University of Zurich, Institute of Molecular Biology
Masahiko Hibi RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Oliver Hobert Columbia University Medical Center
Matthew Hoffman NIH/NIDCR
Stefan Hoppler University of Aberdeen
Marthe J. Howard University of Toledo
Jeffrey Innis University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Suresh Jesuthasan National University of Singapore
Naihe Jing Chinese Academy of Sciences
Gabrielle Kardon Eccles Institute of Human Genetics, University of Utah
Matthew Kelley NIH/NIDCD
Robert N. Kelsh University of Bath
Daniel S. Kessler University of Pennsylvania
Cheol-Hee Kim Chungnam National University Daejon, Korea
Margaret L. Kirby Duke University Medical Center
John Klingensmith Duke University Medical Center
Peter Koopman University of Queensland
Vladimir Korzh National University of Singapore
Paul Krieg University of Arizona College of Medicine
Kristen L. Kroll Washington University School of Medicine
Paul M. Kulesa Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Kansas City
Justin P. Kumar Indiana University, Bloomington
Shigeru Kuratani RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Raj Ladher RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Andrew Lassar Harvard Medical School
Ed Laufer Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
Thomas Lecuit CNRS-University of the Mediterranean, Marseille
Junho Lee Seoul National University
Myeong Min Lee Yonsei University, Korea
Frances Lefcort Montana State University
Mark Lewandoski National Cancer Institute at Frederick
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Anthea Letsou Eccles Institute of Human Genetics University of Utah
Edward Levine University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute
Kersti K. Linask University of South Florida College of Medicine
Brian A. Link Medical College of Wisconsin
Howard D. Lipshitz University of Toronto
Charles D. Little University of Kansas Medical Center
Thomas Lufkin Genome Institute of Singapore
Susan Mackem NIH/NCI
Moises Mallo Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia Oeiras, Portugal
Susan Mango Harvard University
Christophe Marcelle Monash University, Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute (ARMI)
Oscar Marín Universidad Miguel Hernández, Alicante, Spain
Paul Martin Univeristy of Bristol
Salvador Martinez Universidad Miguel Hernández, Alicante, Spain
Teri Jo Mauch University of Utah School of Medicine
Roberto Mayor University College London
James D. McGhee University of Calgary, Genes and Development Research Group
Helen McNeill Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Toronto
Mark Mercola Burnham Institute, La Jolla
Mark Metzstein University of Utah
Cecilia B. Moens Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Sally A. Moody Georege Washington University Medical Center
Anne Moon University of Utah School of Medicine
Bruce A. Morgan Massachusetts General Hospital
H.-Arno Müller University of Dundee, Scotland
Charles Murtaugh Eccles Institute of Human Genetics, University of Utah
Harukazu Nakamura Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan
José Xavier Neto Laboratório de Genética e Cardiologia Molecular São Paulo, Brazil
Philip A. Newmark University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tsutomu Nohno Kawasaki Medical School
Sumihare Noji University of Tokushima
Shannon Odelberg University of Utah School of Medicine
Bradley B. Olwin University of Colorado
Lynne A. Opperman Baylor College of Dentistry
Virginia E. Papaioannou University of Manchester
Nancy Papalopulu Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK Institute
Tatjana Piotrowski University of Utah School of Medicine
Benjamin Podbilewicz Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Olivier Pourquie IGBMC, Illkirch Cedex, France
Victoria E. Prince University of Chicago
David Raible University of Washington
Mahendra S. Rao Invitrogen Corporation, Carlsbad, CA
Jeremy Reiter Cardiovascular Research Institute, USCF
Linda J. Richards University of Maryland School of Medicine
Bruce B. Riley Texas A&M University
Benoit Robert Institut Pasteur, France
Henk Roelink University of California, Berkeley
Thomas H. Rosenquist University of Nebraska Medical Center
Nadia Rosenthal European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Rome
Joel H. Rothman University of California, Santa Barbara
Ann E. Rougvie The University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
John L. R. Rubenstein University of California, San Francisco
Hidetoshi Saiga Tokyo Metropolitan University
Yukio Saijoh University of Utah School of Medicine
Alejandro Sanchez-Alvarado University of Utah School of Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical School
Yoshiki Sasai RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Hiroshi Sasaki RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Noriyuki Satoh Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology
Alexander F. Schier Harvard University
Thomas F. Schilling University of California, Irvine
Tim Schedl Washington University School of Medicine
Sheryl A. Scott University of Utah School of Medicine
Michael Sheets University of Wisconsin Medical School
Michael M. Shen Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons
Guojun Sheng RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Yun-Bo Shi NIH/NICHD
Joseph Shieh University of California San Francisco, Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease
Sebastian Shimeld University of Oregon
Maya F. Sieber-Blum Newcastle University, Institute of Human Genetics and Northeast England Stem Cell Institute
Hans-Georg Simon Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Frank Slack Yale University
Susan M. Smith University of Wisconsin, Madison
Sergei Sokol Mount Sinai Medical School
Deepak Srivastava University of California, San Francisco
H. Scott Stadler Oregon Health and Science University, Portland
Michael R. Stark Brigham Young University
Derek L. Stemple Wellcome Trust Genome Campus
Yukiko Sugi Medical University of South Carolina
Asako Sugimoto RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe
Xin Sun University of Wisconsin, Madison
Kathy K.H. Svoboda Baylor College of Dentistry
Yoshiko Takahashi Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST)
Patrick P.L. Tam National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
Koji Tamura Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan
Carl Thummel University of Utah School of Medicine
Miguel Torres Universidad Autonoma, Madrid, Spain
Kathryn W. Tosney University of Miami, Coral Gables
Paul Trainor Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Kansas City
Jessica Treisman Skirball Institute Program of Developmental Genetics
Tadashi Uemura Kyoto University
Judith M. Venuti LSU Health Sciences Center
Michiko Watanabe Case Western Reserve University
Brant M. Weinstein NIH/NICHD/LMB
Gary M. Wessel Brown University
Chris V.E. Wright Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Doris Wu NIH/NIDCD
Ting Xie Stowers Institute for Medical Resarch, Kansas City
Ramin Yadegari University of Arizona
Gen Yamada Kumamoto University, Japan
Terry P. Yamaguchi NIH/NCI
Katherine Yutzey Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz University of Cambridge, Gurdon Institute | |
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