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期刊名称:AGING CELL

ISSN:1474-9718
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.wiley.com/bw/submit.asp?ref=1474-9718
影响因子:9.304
主题范畴:CELL BIOLOGY;    GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Aging Cell is a new journal aiming to publish novel and exciting science which addresses fundamental issues in the biology of aging. All areas of aging biology are welcome in the journal and the experimental approaches used can be wide-ranging. With the rapid developments in genomic sequencing and analysis, and availability of new technologies to analyse functional genomics and proteomics, the combined powers of genetics, biochemistry and cell biology are leading to the very rapid production of new information. Aging Cell welcomes the results of these programmes.

Aging Cell covers:

  • Genes and functional genomics: mutations affecting longevity; gene homologies; organismal and cellular aging; gene manipulation
  • Cell proliferation, senescence and death: senescence of DNA including telomeres and telomerase; cellular aging; intrinsic versus extrinsic influences; apoptosis 
  • Signaling and gene expression: altered interactions between cells and tissues, eg. hormonal, immune, inflammatory systems; altered intracellular signalling, eg. key pathways
  • Cell stress and damage: extrinsic and intrinsic influences of free radicals on cells; free radical defence and damage; free radicals as signalling molecules; stress and aging; hypothalamic-pituitary-drenal axis 
  • Stem Cells and Aging: effects of age on stem cell generation, migration and phenotype and regulatory mechanisms
  • Integrative physiology: outcomes of aging processes at organism, cell and molecular levels
  • Biodemography and comparative studies: population and cross-species comparative studies
  • New theories of aging and longevity: discussion at the broadest level of established and novel theories of aging and longevity

Aging Cell was launched in October 2002 and is published bimonthly. Article types include:

  • novel, peer-reviewed research, concentrating in the areas described above
  • reviews and minireviews including assessments of high-profile research, book reviews etc.
  • commentaries, both introducing current papers published in the Journal and directing readers attention to important articles in other leading journals
  • proceedings of symposia relating to new areas in the field
  • development and criticism of general theories of biological ageing.

Special issues will be considered in particular subject areas, commissioned by the Editors.


Instructions to Authors
 

Aims and scope
The aim of Aging Cell is to publish novel and exciting science, which addresses fundamental issues in the biology of aging. For publication in Aging Cell, the research must provide a highly significant new contribution to our understanding of aging and be of general interest to the research community in the science of aging. All areas of aging biology research are welcome in the journal (for sections of specific interest see aims and scope). All experimental approaches, including recent developments in genomic sequencing and analysis, functional genomics, proteomics and metabolomics, classical genetics, biochemistry and cell biology and whole organism studies are welcome in Aging Cell.


Aging Cell will publish four main types of article. (1) The principal content of the journal will be primary research papers of standard format, subject to peer review. The Editors-in- Chief offer a rapid (48-h) decision on papers rejected by top journals such as Nature, Science or PNAS on the grounds of editorial priority, but with favourable reviews. Papers must be accompanied by the reviewers' comments. (2) Each issue will include short reviews on topical subjects including a new forum entitled 'Head-to-Head' reviews commissioned by the Reviews Editor. These will feature 3000-6000-word articles from pre-eminent scholars with opposing views in a key area of research and will include rebuttals of opponents' views. (3) 'Short Takes' for rapid publication of brief reports will be considered. (4) Commentaries on key papers published in Aging Cell or elsewhere will be welcomed and will be commissioned at the Editor's discretion. Corresponding authors will receive four months subscription to the online edition of Aging Cell. Their article will be freely available from the Journal's website. Authors of review or minireview articles will not be charged for colour illustrations.


Supplementary Material, including raw data from, for example, longevity and gene microarray studies, will be published via the online edition only.


Did you know... Aging Cell has no page charges?


Submission of manuscripts
Aging Cell now accepts submissions online at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/agingcell. Read and apply the loading instructions, including specifications of file types for text and illustrations given on the site. Should authors encounter difficulties they may contact
the ScholarOne support desk at 434 817 2040 ext. 167 or via Email at: Support@scholarone.com.


Authors who cannot submit their manuscripts at the Aging Cell manuscript submission website should send one copy of the manuscript, including one copy of all illustrative material, tables and a matching copy of the manuscript on a 3.5-inch low- or high-density diskette or CD-ROM to the Editor-in-Chief of Aging Cell: Tim Cowen PhD, Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, University College London, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill Street, London NW3 2PF, UK.

The Editors will choose a Section Editor in an appropriate field of interest to supervise reviewing. Authors must provide a list of five possible reviewers. Papers considered to be outside the field of interest of the Journal will be returned without delay. All questions about the status of manuscripts under review should be directed to the Editorial Office. Please use the e-mail address t.cowen@medsch.ucl.ac.uk for such enquiries. Correspondence relating to all editorial matters should be directed to the Editor-in-Chief (address above).

Papers are accepted on the understanding that no substantial part has been, or will be, published elsewhere. If accepted, papers become the copyright of Blackwell Publishing and the Anatomical Society of Great Britain & Northern Ireland.

Pre-submission English-language editing
Authors for whom English is a second language may choose to have their manuscript professionally edited before submission to improve the English. A list of independent suppliers of editing services can be found here. All services are paid for and arranged by the author, and use of one of these services does not guarantee acceptance or preference for publication.

Author material archive policy
Please note that unless specifically requested, Blackwell Publishing will dispose of all hardcopy or electronic material submitted four months after publication. If you require the return of any material submitted, please inform the editorial office or production editor as soon as possible if you have not yet done so.

Exclusive Licence Form 

Authors will be required to sign an Exclusive Licence Form (ELF) for all papers accepted for publication. Signature of the ELF is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless a signed form has been received. Please note that signature of the Exclusive Licence Form does not affect ownership of copyright in the material.  (Government employees need to complete the Author Warranty sections, although copyright  in such cases does not need to  be assigned).  After submission authors will retain the right to publish their paper in various medium/circumstances (please see the form for further details).  To assist authors an appropriate form will be supplied by the editorial office. Alternatively, authors may like to download a copy of the form Here.

If you would like your Article to be published OnlineOpen, you can download the form here.


Colour work agreement
It is the policy of Aging Cell for authors to pay the full cost for the reproduction of their colour artwork in print for all articles other than Reviews and Mini Reviews. In the event that an author is not able to cover the costs of reproducing colour figures in colour in the printed version of the journal, Aging Cell offers authors the opportunity to reproduce colour figures in colour for free in the online version of the article (but they will still appear in black and white in the print version). If an author wishes to take advantage of this free colour-on-the-web service, they should liaise with the Editorial Office to ensure that the appropriate documentation is completed for the Publisher.
Therefore, please note that if there is colour artwork in your manuscript when it is accepted for publication, Blackwell Publishing require you to complete and return a colour work agreement form before your paper can be published. This form can be downloaded as a PDF* from the internet. If you are unable unable to download the form, please contact the Editorial Office at: s.waller@medsch.ucl.ac.uk and they will be able to email or FAX a form to you. Once completed, please return the form to the Production Editor at the address below:
Aging Cell
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
101 George Street
Edinburgh
Scotland
EH2 3ES

E-mail: ace@oxon.blackwellpublishing.com

Any article received by Blackwell Publishing with colour work will not be published until the form has been returned.

*To read PDF files, you must have Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. If you do not have this program, this is available as a free download from the following web address: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html

Presentation of manuscripts
1. Primary research papers: All manuscripts must be submitted online  http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com
/agingcell and must conform to the specifications given on the website. Only manuscripts in English will be published. Spelling should conform to that in The Concise Oxford Dictionary or Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary.


The title page should include: (1) the full title of the paper; (2) the full names of all the authors; (3) the name(s) and address(es) of the institution(s) at which the work was carried out (the present addresses of the authors, if different from the above, should appear in a footnote); (4) the name, address, telephone and fax numbers and e-mail address of the author to whom all correspondence and proofs should be sent; the e-mail addresses of all the authors if possible; (5) a suggested running title of not more than 50 characters, including spaces; (6) six key words to aid indexing; (7) word count.


Generally, all papers should be divided into the following sections and appear in the order: (1) Summary, not exceeding 250 words; (2) Introduction; (3) Results; (4) Discussion; (5) Experimental procedures; (6) Acknowledgments; (7) References; (8) Tables; (9) Figure legends; (10) Figures. The Results and Discussion sections may contain subheadings. Experimental procedures should be sufficiently detailed to enable the experiments to be reproduced. Trade names should be capitalized and the manufacturer's name and address given.


All pages must be numbered consecutively from the title page, and include the acknowledgments, references, tables, and figure legends.


2. Reviews: As (1) but with a summary of less than 250 words followed by continuous narrative. Preference is given to short, focused reviews of a maximum length of 6000 words, including references. As a novel format, Head-to-Head reviews from proponents and opponents of particular views will be individually commissioned. Articles of 3000- 6000 words including references will be peer reviewed and then sent to the 'opposing' author for 1000-word rebuttals to be published alongside the reviews. The editors welcome suggestions for reviews of either format.


3. Short Takes: Research frequently generates 'gold nuggets' which do not fit easily into a larger story. Furthermore, there is a regular need to publish short reports rapidly in highly competitive areas, where grant support is being sought etc. The editors will accept 'short takes' consisting of a maximum of 1000 words (this includes all text except references), starting with a Summary of less than 250 words, including title page (as above), and two figures.

4. Commentaries: the editors will commission commentaries on seminal articles published in Aging Cell or elsewhere. Form will be as 'Short Takes'. Suggestions of appropriate papers are welcomed.

Supplementary Material
Supplementary Material, such as data sets, including raw data, or additional figures or tables, that will not be published in the print edition of the journal but which will be viewable via the online edition can be submitted as Excel or tab-delimited text files. Two areas are highlighted by the editors where this practice is obligatory:
(1) Submission of lifetime survival studies:
- for each survival or mortality plot, authors must provide the raw data in the form of a table to allow replication of the presented analysis and to facilitate independent analysis and cross-study comparisons.  The table should be formatted with, as a minimum, the following columns: Age-interval; Number entering the age-interval (Nx); Number dead within the age interval (dx); Number censored within the age interval (cx).  It is unnecessary, but may be included at the author's choice, to present lifetable statistics as additional columns (e.g. period and cumulative survival, life expectancy, hazard, etc.). 
- for each published figure, provide a separate table labeled as "Table for data of figure #".  Organize the table such that each cohort (the group that constitutes data for a single line in the figure) is represented as an independent  subsections.  Thus, in Excel, use separate worksheets for each cohort and label the worksheet with the same text used in the figure legend.  In a tab-delimited text file, stack the subsections and label each section with a subheading from text used in the figure legend.
(2) Submission of microarray data:
- sufficient information must be provided to allow replication of results, including method of RNA extraction, types of slides used, spotting chemistries, labelling, hybridization, washing and associated procedures;
- full description of normalization procedures when using either the  two-colour or the oligonucleotide approach;
- a detailed statistical analysis must be provided in the discussion of microarray results, using appropriate analysis;
- an independent method must be used to validate the results for some of the genes identified as differentially expressed with, where possible, a rationale for the choice of genes;
- the raw, complete data set must be tabulated and posted in order to facilitate independent analysis and cross-study comparisons.
It should be clearly stated at the time of submission that the Supplementary Material is intended to be made available through the online edition.
The availability of Supplementary Material should be indicated in the main manuscript by a paragraph, to appear after the References, headed 'Supplementary Material' and providing titles of figures, tables, etc. The Supplementary Material should be submitted to the Editorial Office either in final form, ready for viewing, or as a URL allowing access to the Editorial Office and reviewers. No changes can be made subsequently by the Editorial Office or the Publisher. This Supplementary Material is an integral part of the article and will be reviewed accordingly. Further details are available here.


Units and abbreviations
SI units should be used, as given in Units, Symbols and Abbreviations, published by the Royal Society of Medicine Services Ltd,
1 Wimpole Street, London W1M 8AE, UK. Abbreviations should be given in words the first time they are used.


Scientific nomenclature
Complete scientific names should be given when organisms are first mentioned. The generic name may subsequently be abbreviated to the initial. It is important to differentiate between genes and proteins. All gene names and loci should be italic; proteins should be upright.

References
References should be cited in the text by author and date, e.g. Shah & Klessig (1999). Joint authors should be referred to by et al. if there are more than two, e.g. Sambrook et al. More than one paper from the same author(s) in the same year must be identified by the letters a, b, c, etc., placed after the year of publication. At the end of the paper, references should be listed alphabetically according to the first named author. The full titles of papers, chapters and books should be given, the abbreviated names of journals, with the first and last page numbers.

Examples
Whittemore SR, Nieto-Sampedro M, Needels DL, Cotman CW (1985) Neuronotrophic factors for mammalian brain neurons: injury induction in neonatal, adult and aged rat brain. Brain Res. 352, 169-178.

Willot JF (1999) Neurogerontology: Aging and the Nervous System. New York: Springer Publishing Company, Inc.

Cotman CW (1990) Synaptic plasticity, neurotrophic factors, and transplantation in the aged brain. In Handbook of the Biology of Aging (Schneider EL, ed). San Diego: Academic Press, pp. 617-644.

Work that has not been accepted for publication and personal communications should not appear in the reference list, but may be referred to in the text. It is the authors' responsibility to obtain permission from colleagues to include their work as a personal communication.

We recommend the use of a tool such as EndNote or Reference Manager for reference management and formatting.
EndNote reference styles can be searched for here:
http://www.endnote.com/support/enstyles.asp

Reference Manager reference styles can be searched for here:http://www.refman.com/support/rmstyles.asp

 

Figures
Vector graphics (e.g. line artwork) should be saved in encapsulated postscript format (.eps).  All figures must be submitted in tagged image file fomat (.tif); initial submissions in .jpg format may be accepted in order to facilitate electronic transmission for reviewing. Detailed information on our digital illustration standards are available at: http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/illustration.asp. Wherever possible please also supply high quality hard copy figures at the time of manuscript acceptance.
The journal welcomes colour illustrations. Reviews and mini-reviews can include colour illustrations free of charge. Please refer to www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/sub3000_F_cow.pdf for details of the cost of colour reproduction for all other articles. Under exceptional circumstances, authors may request waiver of these charges. This must be done, in writing, at the time of submission of the manuscript, and authors must justify to the Editors that inclusion of the figure(s) in colour is essential for interpretation of the results presented.

Figure legends
Figure legends should be typed on separate sheets and must contain sufficient information to be understood without reference to the text. Legends should not contain methods. Each should begin with a short title for the figure. All symbols and abbreviations used in the figures should be explained. In the full-text online edition of the journal, figure legends may be truncated in abbreviated links to the full-screen version. Therefore, the first 100 characters of any legend should inform the reader of key aspects of the figure.

Tables
Tables should be set out on separate pages and saved in Word format. They should have a brief descriptive title and be self-explanatory. Units should appear in parentheses in the column headings, not in the body of the table.

Proofs

The corresponding author will receive an email alert containing a link to a web site. A working e-mail address must therefore be provided for the corresponding author. The proof can be downloaded as a PDF (portable document format) file from this site. Acrobat Reader will be required in order to read this file. This software can be downloaded (free of charge) from the following web site:

http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html.

 

This will enable the file to be opened, read on screen and printed out in order for any corrections to be added. Further instructions will be sent with the proof. Hard copy proofs will be posted if no e-mail address is available. Excessive changes made by the author in the proofs, excluding typesetting errors, will be charged separately.

 

Major alterations to the text will be charged to the author and may delay publication.

 

Accepted Articles Published Online ahead of Print
Articles in this journal which have been peer-reviewed and accepted, but not yet copy-edited, are published online through our OnlineAccepted feature in advance of print publication - click here to see the articles currently available. At this time Supplementary Material cannot be published at the OnlineAccepted stage. Any required Supplementary Material will be available online from the OnlineEarly stage.

OnlineEarly
Aging Cell is covered by Blackwell Publishing's OnlineEarly service.
OnlineEarly articles are complete full-text articles published online in advance of their publication in a printed issue. Articles are therefore available as soon as they are ready, rather than having to wait for the next scheduled print issue. OnlineEarly articles are complete and final. They have been fully reviewed, revised and edited for publication, and the authors' final corrections have been incorporated.
Because they are in final form, no changes can be made after online publication. The nature of OnlineEarly articles means that they do not yet have volume, issue or page numbers, so OnlineEarly articles cannot be cited in the traditional way. They are therefore given a Digital Object Identifier (DOI), which allows the article to be cited and tracked before it is allocated to an issue. After print publication, the DOI remains valid and can continue to be used to cite and access the article. More information about DOIs can be found on the Web: http://www.doi.org/faq.html

If you would like to receive an email alert when your paper has been published OnlineEarly, please follow the instructions on the following document:  http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/email_alert.pdf

Offprints
A PDF offprint of the online published article will be provided free of charge to the corresponding author, and may be distributed subject to the Publisher's terms and conditions. Paper offprints of the printed published article may be purchased if ordered via the method stipulated on the instructions that will accompany the proofs. Printed offprints are posted to the correspondence address given for the paper unless a different address is specified when ordered. Note that it is not uncommon for printed offprints to take up to eight weeks to arrive after publication of the journal. For order enquiries please email: offprint@cosprinters.com

Cover photograph
Photographs of high quality suitable for the cover of Aging Cell are welcomed. They should be sent to the Editors and be accompanied by a brief descriptive summary. It is preferred, but not essential, that these should be related to submitted papers.

NEW: Online production tracking is now available for your article through Blackwell's Author Services.
Author Services enables authors to track their article - once it has been accepted - through the production process to publication online and in print. Authors can check the status of their articles online and choose to receive automated e-mails at key stages of production. The author will receive an e-mail with a unique link that enables them to register and have their article automatically added to the system. Please ensure that a complete e-mail address is provided when submitting the manuscript. Visit www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor for more details on online production tracking and for a wealth of resources including FAQs and tips on article preparation, submission and more.

 

Online Open

OnlineOpen is a pay-to-publish service from Blackwell that offers authors whose papers are accepted for publication the opportunity to pay up-front for their manuscript to become open access (i.e. free for all to view and download) via the Blackwell Synergy website. Each OnlineOpen article will be subject to a one-off fee of ?300 (equivalent to $2600), excluding colour charges, to be met by or on behalf of the Author in advance of publication. Upon online publication, the article (both full-text and PDF versions) will be available to all for viewing and download free of charge. The print version of the article will also be branded as OnlineOpen and will draw attention to the fact that the paper can be downloaded for free via the Blackwell Synergy service.

Any authors wishing to send their paper OnlineOpen will be required to complete the combined payment and copyright licence form available from our website at:www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/ACE_OOF.pdf  (Please note this form is for use with OnlineOpen material ONLY.)
Once complete this form should be sent to the Editorial Office along with the rest of the manuscript materials at the time of acceptance or as soon as possible after that (preferably within 24 hours to avoid any delays in processing). Do not inform the Editorial Office that you intend to publish your paper OnlineOpen before acceptance.

The copyright statement for OnlineOpen authors will read:

[date] The Author(s)
Journal compilation [date] Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland


Editorial Board

Editors-in-Chief

Tim Cowen
Department of Anatomy & Developmental Biology
Royal Free and University College Medical School
Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill Street
Hampstead
London NW3 2PF
UK

Tel: +44 20 7830 2181
Fax: +44 20 7472 6763
Email: t.cowen@medsch.ucl.ac.uk

Richard A. Miller
University of Michigan Geriatrics Center
Room 3001 BSRB
Box 2200
109 Zina Pitcher Place
Ann Arbor
MI 48109-2200
USA

Tel: +1 734 936 2122
Fax: +1 734 647 9749
Email: millerr@umich.edu

John Sedivy
Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry
Division of Biology and Medicine
Box G-E438
Brown University
Providence
RI 02912
USA

Tel: +1 401 863 9654
Fax: +1 401 863 9653
Email: john_sedivy@brown.edu

Adam Antebi
Huffington Center on Aging and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Baylor College of Medicine
One Baylor Plaza
Room M-320
Houston
TX 77030
USA

Tel: +1 713 798 6661
Fax: +1 713 798 4161
Email: aantebi@bcm.tmc.edu


Reviews Editor

Stephen L Helfand
Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry
Division of Biology and Medicine
Brown University Laboratories for Molecular Medicine
70 Ship Street, Room 407
Providence
RI 02903
USA

Tel: +1 401 863 1615
Fax: +1 401 863 9653
Email: stephen_helfand@brown.edu

Editorial Board

Genes and functional genomics

Section Editors

Marc Tatar
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
USA

Tel: +1 401 863 3455
Fax: +1 401 863 2166
Email: marc_tatar@brown.edu

Gordon Lithgow
Buck Institute for Age Research
8001 Redwood Boulevard
Novato, CA 94945
USA

Tel: +1 415 209 2094
Email: glithgow@buckinstitute.org

Editors

Linda Partridge
University College London, UK

David Gems
University College London, UK

Valter Longo
University of Southern California, USA

Andrzej Bartke
Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, USA

Cynthia Kenyon
University of California at San Francisco, USA

 




Cell proliferation, senescence and death

Section Editor

Thomas von Zglinicki
University of Newcastle
Institute of Ageing and Health
General Hospital
Newcastle
Tyne and Wear
NE 4 6BE
UK

Tel: +44 191 256 3310
Fax: +44 191 219 5074
Email: t.vonzglinicki@ncl.ac.uk

Pidder Jansen-Dürr
Institute for Biomedical Aging Research
Austrian Academy of Sciences
Rennweg 10
6020 Innsbruck
Austria

Tel: +43 512 583919 44
Fax: +43 512 583919 8
Email: p.jansen-duerr@oeaw.ac.uk

Editors

David G Nicholls
Buck Institute for Age Research, USA

Judith Campisi
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA

Efstathios Gonos
National Hellenic Research Foundation, Greece

Richard Faragher
University of Brighton, UK

Manuel Serrano
Spanish National Cancer Research Center, Spain

Estella Medrano
Huffington Center on Aging, USA

Signalling and gene expression

Section Editors

Giulio Taglialatela
Dept. of Anatomy and Neurosciences
University of Texas Medical Branch
301 University Boulevard
Galveston, TX 77555-1043
USA


Tel: +1 409 772 1679
Fax: +1 409 772 1861
Email: gtaglial@utmb.edu

Janet M Lord
MRC Centre for Immune Regulation
Birmingham University Medical School
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Tel: +44 121 414 4399
Email: j.m.lord@bham.ac.uk

Editors

Caleb E Finch
University of Southern California, USA

Joan M. Lakoski
University of Pittsburgh, USA

Shin-ichiro Imai
Washington University, USA

Gretchen Darlington
Huffington Center on Aging, USA


Cell stress and damage

Section Editors

Kenneth B Beckman
Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute
5700 Martin Luther King Jr Way
Oakland, CA 94609-1673
USA


Tel: +1 510 710 6035
Fax: +1 510 337 0763
Email: kbeckman@chori.org

Brian Merry
Department of Biological Sciences
University of Liverpool
Biosciences Building
Crown Street
Liverpool
Merseyside
L69 7ZB
UK

Tel: +44 151 795 4513
Fax: +44 151 795 4408
Email: bm01@liverpool.ac.uk

Editors

Jim Joseph
USDA-HNRC at Tufts University, USA

Peter W Piper
The University of Sheffield, UK

Mark A Smith
Case Western University, USA

Malcolm Jackson
University of Liverpool, UK

Ana Maria Cuervo
Yeshiva University, USA

Holly van Remmen
University of Texas, USA

Stem cells and aging

Section Editor

Ashok Shetty
Department of Surgery (Division of Neurosurgery)
Duke University Medical Center
DUMC Box 3807
Durham, NC 27710
USA

Fax: +1 919 286 4662
Email: ashok.shetty@duke.edu

Editors

David Greenberg
Buck Institute for Age Research, USA

Jay Edelberg
Cornell University, USA

Tom Rando
Stanford University, USA

Marie Csete
Emory University, USA

Integrative physiology

Section Editors

John Speakman
Rowett Research Institute
Greenburn Road, Bucksburn
Aberdeen AB21 9SB
UK

Tel: +44 1224 712751
Fax: +44 1224 715349
Email: j.speakman@abdn.ac.uk

Lars Larsson
Department of Clinical Neurophysiology
Neuroscience
Akademiska Sjukhuset
Uppsala SE-751 85
Sweden

Tel: +46 18 611 34 45
Fax: +46 18 55 61 06
Email: lars.larsson@neurofys.uu.se

Editors

Jill Carrington
National Instutute on Aging, USA

Keith Crutcher
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, USA

Brun Ulfhake
Retzius Laboratory, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden

Gillian S. Butler-Browne
CNRS UMR 7000, France

James Nelson
University of Texas, USA

William Sonntag
University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, USA

Biodemography and comparative studies

Section Editors

Scott Pletcher
Huffington Center of Aging
Department of Molecular and Human Genetics
Baylor College of Medicine
One Baylor Plaza M-320
Houston, TX 77030
USA

Tel.: +1 713 798 5524
Email: pletcher@bcm.tmc.edu

Eline Slagboom
University of Leiden
Wassenaarseweg 72
Leiden 2333 AL
Netherlands

Editors

Anne Bronikowski
Iowa State University, USA

James Carey
University of California, USA

Kaare Christensen
University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

Tamara Harris
National Institute on Aging, USA

New theories of aging and longevity

Section Editor

Daniel Promislow
Department of Genetics
University of Georgia
Athens, GA 30602-7223
USA

Tel: +1 706 542 1715
Fax: +1 706 543 3910
Email: promislow@uga.edu

Editors

Steven Austad
University of Texas, USA

Tom Kirkwood
University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK

George Martin
University of Washington, USA

Edward Masoro
University of Texas Health Science Center, USA



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