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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY

ISSN:1672-9072
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1744-7909
期刊网址:http://www.jipb.net/
影响因子:7.061
主题范畴:BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY;    PLANT SCIENCES;    China Journals
变更情况:Former titles (until 2005): Acta Botanica Sinica (中国) (0095-4195)

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



About the journal

Journal of Integrative Plant Biology (JIPB) is a peer-reviewed monthly journal that reports the latest plant biology discoveries. It was established in 1952 as Acta Botanica Sinica, and is sponsored by the Botanical Society of China and the Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences. The journal publishes 5 types of articles: commentaries, invited expert reviews, minireviews, new technologies, and full-length research articles.

All review articles are by invitation from board members, and all research articles explore fundamental plant biological questions using integrative genetic, biochemical, cell and molecular biological tools, with proper experimental design and statistical analyses.

 

Basic Information about JIPB:

Impact Factor:

3.75 (2012)

Page Charge:

None

Availability:

SCI, PubMed, Google Scholar, CA, BA, etc. (67 databases in total)

Subscriptions:

14,357 libraries worldwide

Visibility:

196,782 full-text downloads in 2012

Publisher:

Wiley-Blackwell

Average Handling Time: 

First decision: 26 days; submission to online publication: 56 days

 

Useful Links:

Subscription:

http://www.jipb.net/subscription_form.asp

Advertising:

http://www.jipb.net/advertising.asp

Editorial Board:

http://www.jipb.net/ed_board.asp

 

JIPB Editors (Former and Current):

1952
Chief Editor: Shih-Wei Loo

1954
Chief Editor: Cheng-Hou Lou

1959
Chief Editor: Sung-Shu Chien
Associate Editor: Chin-yueh Chang

1979
Chief Editor: Cheng Tsui
Associate Editor: Zheng-Li Li

1987
Chief Editor: Fu-Hsiung Wang
Associate Editor: Zheng-Li Li

1996
Chief Editor: Xin-Shi Zhang
Associate Editors: Ting-Yun Kuang, Zhi-Qing Zhu, Zheng-Li Li, Chang-Fu Li and Zhang-Liang Chen

1999
Honorary Chief Editors: Ting-Yun Kuang and Xin-Shi Zhang
Chief Editor: He-Chun Ye
Associate Editors: Ming Dong, Song Ge, Chang-Fu Li, Jin-Xing Lin, Wei-Hua Wu and Yu-Xian Zhu

2004
Honorary Chief Editors: Ting-Yun Kuang and Xin-Shi Zhang
Chief Editor: Xing-Guo Han
Associate Editors: Ming Dong, Song Ge, Chang-Fu Li, Jin-Xing Lin, Wei-Hua Wu, Yu-Xian Zhu and Jin-Zhong Cui

2005
Chief Editors: Xing-Guo Han and Hong Ma
Associate Editors (In alphabetical order): Xiao-Ya Chen, Kong Chong, Jin-Zhong Cui, Xingwang Deng, Ming Dong, Xinnian Dong, Jing-Yun Fang, Song Ge, Hong-Ya Gu, De-An Guo, Hong-Wen Huang, Ning Li, Jin-Xing Lin, Chun-Ming Liu, Cong-Ming Lu, Ke-Ping Ma, Su-Hua Shi, Ren-Xiang Tan, Wei-Hua Wu, Yong-Biao Xue, Da-Yong Zhang, Yu-Xian Zhu

2007
Chief Editors: Xing-Guo Han and Hong Ma
Executive Editor: Chun-Ming Liu
Associate Editors (In alphabetical order): Xiao-Ya Chen, Kong Chong, Jin-Zhong Cui, Xingwang Deng, Ming Dong, Xinnian Dong, Jing-Yun Fang, Song Ge, Hong-Ya Gu, De-An Guo, Hong-Wen Huang, Ning Li, Jin-Xing Lin, Chun-Ming Liu, Cong-Ming Lu, Ke-Ping Ma, Su-Hua Shi, Ren-Xiang Tan, Wei-Hua Wu, Yong-Biao Xue, Da-Yong Zhang and Yu-Xian Zhu

2008
Chief Editors: Xing-Guo Han and Hong Ma
Executive Editor: Chun-Ming Liu
Associate Editors (In alphabetical order): Roberto Bassi, Clive Lloyd, William J. Lucas, Klaus Palme and Rowan Sage

2009–Present
Chief Editor: Chun-Ming Liu
Associate Editors (In alphabetical order): Ian T.Baldwin (2010–Present), Roberto Bassi (2009–2010), Chris Hawes (2011–Present), Leon V.Kochian (2010–Present), Clive Lloyd (2009–2010), William J. Lucas (2009–Present), Klaus Palme (2009–2010), Li-Jia Qu (2009–Present), Rowan Sage (2009–2010), Mark Stitt (2012–Present), and Weicai Yang (2009–Present)


Instructions to Authors

Instructions for Authors

(Updated on February 21, 2014)
 

PLEASE NOTE: Authors whose articles contain Arabidopsis gene-related data must submit their data to the TAIR database: http://www.arabidopsis.org/.

Arabidopsis Gene-related Data. Authors whose articles contain Arabidopsis gene-related data must submit their data to the TAIR database: (
http://arabidopsis.org/).


Thank you for your interest in Journal of Integrative Plant Biology (JIPB), formerly Acta Botanica Sinica. For the quickest and most efficient manuscript processing, we ask you to carefully read the guidelines below before submitting your paper.

We are very pleased to announce that there will be no page charge for manuscripts submitted before Feb. 1st, 2014. This means that all publications will be completely free of charge. Submit your manuscript now to take advantage of this limited-time opportunity!

(Please note: optional color print page charges still apply).

Table of Contents

1. AIM & SCOPE

2. ARTICLE CATEGORIES

3. RESEARCH THEMES, ASSOCIATE EDITORS & CO-EDITORS

4. PEER-REVIEW PROCESS

5. CONFLICTS OF INTERESTS

6. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS

7. SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS

8. COPYRIGHT 

9. MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

10. MANUSCRIPT STYLE

11. FREE ACCESS POLICY

12. SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

13. MANUSCRIPT PROCESSING

14. PROOFS

15. JIPB COVER PICTURE SELECTION

16. OFFPRINTS

17. PUBLICATION FEES

18. SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

19. EDITORIAL OFFICE CONTACT DETAILS


1. AIM & SCOPE


The aim of the journal is to report novel scientific discoveries related to all biological processes in plants using integrative genetic, chemical, cell, and molecular biological approaches to understand plants at both the micro- and macro-scale. Articles submitted to JIPB should fit into one of the following 7 themes: 1) Cell and Developmental Biology; 2) Functional Omics and Systems Biology; 3) Metabolism and Biochemistry; 4) Molecular Ecology and Evolution; 5) Molecular Physiology; 6) Plant-environmental Interactions and 7) Plant Reproduction Biology. Our primary focus is to provide the answers to significant plant biological questions and on the technologies essential for such studies. Preliminary observations, purely descriptive studies, tissue culture and transformation, and reporting on single plant-derived chemicals fall beyond the scope of the journal.

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2. ARTICLE CATEGORIES


The journal publishes peer-reviewed papers in 5 categories:

 

• Commentaries
Invited Expert Reviews
• Minireviews
• New Technologies
• Research Articles


•  Commentaries


The commentary section gives our authors an opportunity to exchange viewpoints, praise and criticism with each other and with the wider plant community. Authors may submit comments in regards to previous journal content, or bring up other issues that may be of interest and relevant to the journal. Commentary will appear in the beginning of the journal and will be published in a two column format with no abstract or keywords. Authors and references are always presented at the end of the commentary, after the text.


•  Invited Expert Reviews


Articles published in this section intend to bring our readers the latest scientific news and advances in plant biology. These papers should be written by one or more experts in the field and be focused on exciting or important new ideas. They can be provocative, and should be focused on providing insights or on introducing new concepts or points of view. Authors may cite their own work if it relates to the topic but the article should not be viewed as a place to promote one’s own research. The use of figures is encouraged if they clearly add to the reader’s ability to understand the subject. Although invited, review articles must pass through the regular reviewing and revision process before being accepted for publication.

To highlight the "Invited Expert Review," a portrait photo of the corresponding author will be used on the first page of the paper. Although JIPB does not accept review articles by general submission, authors may consult the Editor of a particular research area if they are considering submitting a review article to JIPB.


•  Minireviews


Minireviews are 3-7 print page reviews, which can be on all topics of plant sciences (with up to three figures and no more than 40 references). All minireviews should provide critical analyses or comments on defined areas, which shall be of interest for the general audience in plant biology. Minireviews can be written by one or more experts in the field, as well as post docs. Authors may cite their own work if it relates to the topic at hand, but these articles should not be viewed as a place to promote one’s own research. Minireviews must pass through the regular reviewing and revision process before being accepted for publication.


•  New Technologies


The new technologies category describes new and improved methods and research tools. Articles should provide a concise and comprehensive explanation of how novel technologies may be applied in plant research and should evaluate and compare older techniques and explain why the new method is more efficient, cheaper, simpler, etc. Manuscripts in this category should contain an abstract, keywords, and references like a standard article.


•  Research Articles


Full-length research articles should explore basic biological questions through reproducible experimental design, using genetic, biochemical, cell and molecular biological methods and statistical analyses. All valid manuscripts submitted to JIPB are handled by our editors and co-editors. All research articles published in JIPB should fall under one of the journal's 7 research themes (see section 3 for details on the 7 themes). Full length articles should be divided into the following sections: (1) Title page, (2) Abstract, (3) Introduction, (4) Results, (5) Discussion, (6) Materials and Methods (7) Acknowledgements, (8) Funding, (9) Conflict of interest, (10) References, (11) Figure legends, (12) Appendices, (13) Tables, (14) Figures.

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3. RESEARCH THEMES, ASSOCIATE EDITORS & CO-EDITORS


Research articles are published under 7 themes:

 

• Cell and Developmental Biology
• Functional Omics and Systems Biology
• Metabolism and Biochemistry
• Molecular Ecology and Evolution
• Molecular Physiology
• Plant-environmental Interactions
• Plant Reproduction Biology


♦ Cell and Developmental Biology
Associate Editor: Chris Hawes (Oxford Brookes University, UK)
Research topics in this theme include cell division, cell differentiation, organogenesis and pattern formation.
Co-Editors:

Tobias I. Baskin

(University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA)

Anja Geitmann

(Université de Montréal, Canada)

Jirong Huang

(Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, CAS, China)

Jianping Hu

(Michigan State University, USA)

Patrick Moreau

(Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, France)

Lars Ostergaard

(John Innes Centre, UK)

Haiyun Ren (Beijing Normal University, China)
Frans E. Tax (University of Arizona, USA)
Stephan Wenkel (University of Tübingen, Germany)

Qi Xie

(Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS, China)

Zhenbiao Yang

(University of California, Riverside, USA)

Jian-Ru Zuo

(Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS, China)

 

♦ Functional Omics and Systems Biology
Associate Editor: Li-Jia Qu (Peking University, China)(tentative)
Research topics in this theme include transcriptomics, proteomics, and mathematical metabolomics studies to answer fundamental plant science questions in systems.


Co-Editors:

Natalia Doudareva

(Purdue University, USA)

Sanwen Huang (The Institute of Vegetable and Flowers, CAAS, China)
Hai-Chun Jing (Institute of Botany, CAS, China)

Jin-Sheng Lai

(China Agricultural University, China)

Zhongchi Liu

(University of Maryland, USA)

Jan Traas (University of Lyon, France)
Tomohiko Tsuge (Kyoto University, Japan)

 

♦ Metabolism and Biochemistry
Associate Editor: Mark Stitt (Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Germany)
Research topics in this theme include primary and secondary metabolisms, metabolic pathways, molecular interaction, and protein structure.
Co-Editors:

Vincent Bulone

(AlbaNova University Centre, Sweden)

Katie Dehesh

(University of California, Davis, USA)

Shan Lu

(Nanjing University, China)

Xiaoquan Qi

(Institute of Botany, CAS, China)

Trevor Wang

(John Innes Centre, UK)

 

♦ Molecular Ecology and Evolution
Associate Editor: Ian Thomas Baldwin (Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Germany)
Research topics in this theme include integrative approaches to study plant ecology and evolution at the chemical, molecular or genomic level.
Co-Editors:

Jiquan Chen (The University of Toledo, USA)
Nicole van Dam (Radboud University Nijmegen,The Netherlands)
Ivan Galis (Okayama University , Japan)
Hongya Gu (Peking University, China)
Catherine Kidner (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Yonggen Lou (Zhejiang University, China)
Bao-Hua Song (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA)
Xiao-Quan Wang (Institute of Botany, CAS, China)
Jianqiang Wu (Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS, China)

 

♦ Molecular Physiology
Associate Editor: Leon V. Kochian (Cornell University, USA)
Research topics in this theme includes complex interactions in plant systems using a systematic approach, and studies of physiological process in plant growth and development using an integrative approach.
Co-Editors:

Jiping Liu (Cornell University, USA)
Cong-Ming Lu (Institute of Botany, CAS, China)
Martin AJ Parry (Rothamsted Research, UK)
Qian Qian (China National Rice Research Institute, China)
Robert Sharp (University of Missouri, USA)
Jianmin Wan (Institute of Crop Science, CAAS, China)
Jianhua Zhang (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China )
Li-Xin Zhang (Institute of Botany, CAS, China)

 

♦ Plant-environmental Interactions
Associate Editor: William J. Lucas (University of California, Davis, USA)
Research topics in this theme include inter- and intra-cellular communication, biotic and abiotic stresses, and environmental response in plants.
Co-Editors:

Kurt Fagerstedt

(University of Helsinki , Finland)
Toru Fujiwara (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Zhizhong Gong (China Agricultural University, China)
Hongwei Guo (Peking University, China)

Ildoo Hwang

(POSTECH Biotech Center, Korea)
Hailing Jin (University of California, USA)
Ulrik John (Victorian AgriBiosciences Centre, Australia)
Pradeep Kachroo (University of Kentucky, USA)
Jia Li (Lanzhou University, China)
Jianming Li (University of Michigan, USA)
Dong Liu (Tsinghua University, China)

Minami Matsui

(Genomic Sciences Center, Riken, Japan)
Christophe Robaglia (CNRS-CEA-Universitéde la Mediterranée, France)

Giovanna Serino

(Università La Sapienza, Italy)

Bart Thomma

(Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

Daoxin Xie (Tsinghua University, China)

 

♦ Plant Reproduction Biology
Associate Editor: Wei-Cai Yang (Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS, China)
Research topics in this theme include integrative approaches to study gamete development, pollination and fertilization, self-incapability, embryo and endosperm development.
Co-Editors:

Mauro Cresti (Università di Siena, Italy)
John Harada (University of California, Davis, USA)

Tetsuya Higashiyama

(Nagoya University, Japan)

Mark Johnson (Brown University, USA)
Yaoguang Liu (South China Agricultural University, China)
Hong Ma (Fudan University, China)
Remko Offringa (Leiden University, The Netherlands)

Imran Siddiqi

(Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, India)

Meng-Xiang Sun (Wuhan University, China)
Yong-Biao Xue (Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS, China)
Dabing Zhang (Shanghai Jiaotong University, China)

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4. PEER-REVIEW PROCESS


JIPB strives to publish papers of the highest quality and originality with the quickest possible turnaround time. All manuscripts received are subjected to a preliminary scope/quality examination by our Manuscript Manager and Associate Editors. Papers beyond the journal's scope or which do not follow the format of the Journal will be returned to the authors without being reviewed. Experts will review manuscripts that meet the journal's initial requirements and a preliminary decision will be made in two to three weeks. The final decision of acceptance or rejection rests with the Editorial Board. Papers are usually published in chronological order of acceptance.

Manuscripts should be written in a clear, concise, direct style so that they are intelligible to the professional reader who is not a specialist in the particular field. Manuscripts with poor English will not be considered for peer-review.

     Non-native English speaking authors who think their manuscript would benefit from professional editing are encouraged to use a language-editing service. JIPB collaborates with two editing services:

Go Write Ahead is a highly personalized, strictly confidential, and efficient scientific editing service offered at competitive rates.  With over twenty years of research experience in leading research institutes in Asia and Australia, the editor has personally published in fields of plant developmental genetics, cell biology, and plant signal transduction.

Editorial services for manuscripts (including two revisions) are as follows:

 • 2500 RMB up to 5,000 words

 • 3000 RMB between 5,0018,000 words

 • 3500 RMB between 8,00112,000 words

Please see Go Write Ahead for more details.

Bioedit Ltd is an online English editing service that offers high-quality language editing of papers in bioscience research. JIPB papers submitted to Bioedit for language editing benefit from a fixed low price: 3000 RMB/330 EUR/450 USD per paper for the comprehensive editing service (7-day turnaround). Revised manuscripts are edited free-of-charge. Please see conditions on the Bioedit website.

Submit your paper to Go Write Ahead or Bioedit Ltd for English editing today.


When contributions are judged as acceptable for publication on the basis of scientific content, the Editor and the Publisher reserve the right to modify typescripts to avoid ambiguity and repetition and improve communication between authors and readers. If extensive alterations are required, the manuscript will be returned to the author for revision.

All editors and reviewers are required to follow the general policy regarding "conflicts of interest." Authors may request reviewers, but should not request people who have a conflict of interest as defined by the policy (see clause 5). Editors are permitted to use any reviewer reasonably believed to be an appropriate scientific expert, except reviewers who would be excluded by the conflict of interest policy. If authors wish to request the exclusion of certain reviewers for other reasons, specific justification must be provided in the cover letter; such requests may be considered at the discretion of the Editor.


If revision is required, authors should carefully read the comments from the reviewers and revise the manuscript accordingly and give clear explanation of what has been changed and what has not and why. Failure to do so may lead to direct rejection. The Co-Editor will evaluate revised manuscripts and determine whether external review is required. The board will normally consider only one round of revision, and the revised manuscript must be submitted within one month unless an extension is granted. In the case that extensive revision including additional experimentation is required; the general policy is to decline the manuscript, in which case editors may choose to encourage resubmission. The author may include the original manuscript ID in the cover letter, which may allow the board to choose the same Editor to deal the manuscript. Resubmissions are subject to the full review process.

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5. CONFLICTS OF INTERESTS


Journal of Integrative Plant Biology (JIPB) requires that all authors disclose any potential sources of conflict of interest. Any interest or relationship, financial or otherwise, that might be perceived as influencing an author's objectivity is considered a potential source of conflict of interest. These must be disclosed when directly relevant or indirectly related to the work that the authors describe in their manuscript. Potential sources of conflict of interest include but are not limited to patent or stock ownership, membership of a company board of directors, membership of an advisory board or committee for a company, and consultancy for or receipt of speaker's fees from a company. The existence of a conflict of interest does not preclude publication in this journal.


If the authors have no conflict of interest to declare, they must also state this at the time of submission.

It is the responsibility of the corresponding author to review this policy with all authors and to collectively list in the cover letter to the Editor-in-Chief, in the manuscript (in the footnotes, Conflict of Interest or Acknowledgments section), and in the online submission system ALL pertinent commercial and other relationships.

Do you or any of your co-authors have a conflict of interest to declare? (required)
Yes
No

If yes, confirm that you have stated this conflict of interest in the footnotes, Conflict of Interest or Acknowledgments section of your manuscript as required by the Journal (see the Instructions to Authors). (required)
Yes
No

Provide details and include this information in your cover letter to the Editor.

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6. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS


Authors must state that the protocol for the research project has been approved by a suitably constituted Ethics Committee of the institution within which the work was undertaken and that, where appropriate, it conforms to the provisions of the Declaration of Helsinki in 1995 (as revised in Seoul 2008), available at: http://www.wma.net/en/30publications/10policies/b3/index.html.

For more specific information on JIPB's ethics in publishing, please visit our website, www.jipb.net.

In taxonomic papers, type specimens and type depositories must be clearly designated and indicated. Authors are required to deposit the name-bearing type material in internationally recognized institutions (not private collections).


For articles in which humans formed part of the experiment, the authors should provide a published statement of informed consent.

Research carried out in areas for which research permits are required (e.g. nature reserves), or when it deals with organisms for which collection or import/export permits are required (e.g. protected species), the authors must clearly detail obtaining these permits in the Acknowledgements section.

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7. SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS


All authors should submit their manuscripts online at http://www.submit-jipb.net. The Bench>Press submission system will guide authors through the process. Additional help is available from  http://submit-jipb.net/submission/submissionhelp or from the Manuscript Manager in JIPB's Editorial Office (+86 10 6283 6133, jipb@ibcas.ac.cn). Our online submission system will ensure a rapid handling of your paper. For peer-review, word processing files are preferred and will be converted to PDF format by the publisher. Although there are no file size limitations, note that large files will take longer to upload and convert to PDF depending on the Internet connection. Please try to keep the maximum combined file size under 5 MB. If you are not satisfied with the final conversion results when the submission is proofed, the complete manuscript may be reloaded. Note that Chinese, Japanese, and Korean fonts must be embedded in a PDF document file when submitted; otherwise the editorial office will not be able to view the submitted manuscript.

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8. COPYRIGHT


Papers accepted for publication in JIPB become copyright of the Publisher, and Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences. In signing the license agreement, it is assumed that authors have obtained permission to use any copyrighted or previously published material. Articles cannot be published until authors have signed the appropriate license agreement. Within several days after submitting your paper, you will receive an email from Wiley’s Author Services system which will ask you to log in and will present you with the appropriate licence for completion.

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9. MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION


Manuscripts should follow JIPB style, be written in concise and grammatically correct English, and be presented in a manner and at a level that will be accessible to the broad readership of the Journal, not specialists. Papers that do not meet these standards will be returned to the authors without further review. Please consult a recent issue of JIPB for guidance on format, organization, and preparation of figures, legends, tables, and references. Authors who think their manuscript would benefit from professional editing are encouraged to use a language-editing service. JIPB collaborates with Bioedit Ltd, an online English editing service that offers special prices for JIPB papers.

In general, there are no limits to the length of manuscripts published in JIPB; however, papers of more than 10 journal pages will be published only if the Co-Editor judges that the content is sufficiently novel to warrant a longer paper. Ten published pages in JIPB correspond to approximately 30 manuscript pages, including tables and figure legends and an average of six one-column figures. The text should not contain any footnotes and any such material should be incorporated into the text as parenthetical matter.

Original manuscripts must be prepared using a standard word processing program (such as Microsoft Word) and should be prepared with 1.5 line spacing and in 12 point type using one of the following fonts: Times New Roman, Courier, Helvetica or Arial.

For bio-medical manuscripts, the authors should abide by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors' Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts (http://www.icmje.org/#obligation).

Please organize your manuscripts in the following order:

• Abstract
Introduction
• Results
• Discussion
Materials and Methods
• Acknowledgments
• References
Figure Legends
• Tables and Figures


All figures should be uploaded as separate .tif files or similar (see figures below for more details).

Title page


The title page should contain (i) the title of the paper, (ii) a running title of no more than 60 characters including spaces, (iii) the full names of the authors and (iv) the addresses of the institutions at which the work was carried out, together with (v) the full postal and email address, plus fax and telephone numbers of the author to whom correspondence about the manuscript should be sent. The present address of any author, if different from that where the work was carried out, should be supplied in a footnote.

The title should be short (no more than 120 characters including spaces), informative and contain the major key words. Do not use abbreviations in the title.

Abstract


All articles should have a brief abstract (no more than 200 words) that summarizes the questions being addressed, the approaches taken, the major findings, and the significance of the results. It should be concise, complete, and clearly communicate the importance of the work for a broad audience. The abstract should not contain references and the use of abbreviations, which should be defined at first use, and should be kept to a minimum.

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Text

Authors should divide their manuscripts into the following sections: Introduction, Results, Discussion, and Materials and Methods. The Introduction should provide the necessary background information for the average reader; it should be both complete and concise. Previous publications that form a basis for the work presented must be cited. Citation of reviews is not a substitute for citing primary research articles. Citation of recent research articles is not a substitute for citing original discoveries. An author's own work should not be cited preferentially over equally relevant work of others. Authors' previously published data that are presented along with new data must be identified clearly and cited appropriately; duplicate publication of data (including data previously published as supplemental material) is not allowed without citation. The Results and Discussion can be subdivided if subheadings give the manuscript more clarity. The Discussion should not repeat the Results; instead, the Discussion should explore the implications of the Results, citing relevant published research, and should also be as concise as possible. A Conclusions section is generally not permitted. Statements of "first finding" are generally not permitted in JIPB.

Acknowledgements


The contribution of colleagues or institutions should also be acknowledged. Authors should not thank anonymous reviewers or acknowledge secretarial services. Other acknowledgements should be kept as brief as courtesy and obligations allow. The authors may also acknowledge the source of financial support, including a declaration of the authors' industrial links and affiliations. 


References

We highly recommend the use of a reference software such as EndNote  (http://www.endnote.com/) for reference management and formatting. The JIPB Endnote reference style can be downloaded here: http://www.jipb.net/EndNotejipbstyle/. The JIPB Endnote Template also can be downloaded here: http://www.jipb.net/EndNotejipbtemplate/.


For invited expert reviews, there is no limitation on the number of references cited, although we strongly suggest citing only publications in which original knowledge was generated. For other types of articles, the maximum number of cited references is 80.


The Harvard (author, date) system of referencing is used (examples are given below). In the text give the author's name followed by the year in parentheses: Smith (2000). If there are two authors use 'and': Smith and Jones (2001); if cited within parentheses also use 'and': (Smith and Jones 2001). When reference is made to a work by three or more authors, the first name followed by et al. should be used: MacDonald et al. (2002). If more than one work is cited within parentheses, separate citations using a semi-colon (Friedman 1994; Wang et al. 1997), except in the case where the author of the works is the same, in which case the author's name should not be repeated, but the years should be divided with a comma (Smith 2000, 2002).

References should be listed in alphabetical order. Always cite the names of all authors in the reference list. References to unpublished data and personal communications should not appear in the list but should be cited in the text only (e.g. A Smith, pers. comm.; RW Wang, unpubl. data). All citations mentioned in the text, tables or figures must be listed in the reference list.

Names of journals should be abbreviated according to the Serial Sources for the Biosis Data Base, available in most libraries or from
http://www.biosis.org . Authors are responsible for the accuracy of the references.


Journals:

Briggs WR, Tseng TS, Cho HY, Swartz TE, Sullivan S, Bogomolni RA (2007) Phototropins and their LOV domains: Versatile plant blue-light receptors. J Integr Plant Biol 49: 410

Kwon SY, Choi SM, Ahn YO, Lee HS, Lee HB, Park YM, Kwak SS (2003) Enhanced stress-tolerance of transgenic tobacco plants expressing a human dehydroascorbate reductase gene. J Plant Physiol 160: 347
353

Sveshnikova IN (1963) Atlas and key for the identification of the living and fossil Sciadopityaceae and Taxodiaceae based on the structure of the leaf epidermis. Acta Sci USSR Paleobot 4: 207237 (in Russian with an English abstract)

Jiang MY, Zhang JH (2004) Abscisic acid and antioxidant defense in plant cells. Acta Bot Sin 46: 19


Books:

Sneath PHA, Sokal RR (1973) Numerical Taxonomy. 2nd eds. Freeman, San Francisco, CA


Nikitin VP (1969) Palaeocarpological Method. Publishing House of Tomsk University, Tomsk (in Russian)


Chapter in a book:


van Went JH, Willemse MTM (1984) Fertilization. In: Johri BM, ed. Embryology of Angiosperms.Springer-Verlag, Berlin. pp. 273317


Phillips SJ, Whisnant JP (1995) Hypertension and stroke. In: Laragh JH, Brener BM, eds. Hypertension: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management. 2nd edn. Raven Press, New York. pp. 465 478

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Appendices


Appendices should be placed at the end of the paper, numbered in Roman numerals and referred to in the text. If written by a person other than the author of the main text, the author's name should be included below the title.


Tables


Tables should be self-contained and complement, but not duplicate information contained in the text. Number tables consecutively in the text in Arabic numerals. Type tables on a separate sheet with the legend above. Legends should be concise but comprehensive: the table, legend and footnotes must be understandable without reference to the text. Vertical lines should not be used to separate columns. Column headings should be brief, with units of measurement in parentheses; all abbreviations must be defined in footnotes. Footnote symbols: a, b, c ... should be used (in that order) and *, **, *** should be reserved for P-values. Statistical measures such as SD or SEM should be identified in the headings.

 

Cover letter


A cover letter must be submitted along with the manuscript, stating that neither the manuscript nor any part of its content has been published or submitted for publication elsewhere, except as a brief abstract in the proceedings of a scientific meeting or symposium. Any closely related papers that are in press or that have been submitted elsewhere should be noted in the cover letter and cited in the submitted manuscript if appropriate. If any new gene symbols are introduced, the authors should state that they have conducted a search of the literature and of community databases and whether each new symbol has been registered in the appropriate community database. If authors wish to request exclusion of any reviewers, specific reasons must be provided. We recommend that authors also explain briefly how their work meets the Journal's scope.


The cover letter must also contain a declaration that all authors have contributed significantly to the work and that all authors are in agreement with the content of the manuscript.

If tables or figures have been reproduced from another source, a letter from the copyright holder (usually the Publisher) stating authorization to reproduce the material must be attached to the cover letter.


Availability of materials


Publication in JIPB implies that the authors agree to provide all materials that are integral to the results presented in the article, including constructs, antibodies, seeds, protocols and whatever would be necessary for a skilled investigator to verify or replicate the claims. Authors are generally expected to take advantage of public repositories or commercial vendors to the extent possible.

Author material archive policy

Authors who require the return of any submitted material that is accepted for publication should inform the Editorial Office at the time of submission. If no indication is given, all hardcopy and electronic material will be disposed of two months after publication.

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10. MANUSCRIPT STYLE


Spelling 


The Journal uses US spelling and authors should therefore follow the latest edition of the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary.


Units


All measurements must be given in SI or SI-derived units. 


Abbreviations


Abbreviations should be used sparingly and only where they ease the reader's task by reducing repetition of long, technical terms. Initially use the word in full, followed by the abbreviation in parentheses. Thereafter use the abbreviation only.


Trade names 


Chemical substances should be referred to by their generic name only. Trade names should not be used when it is not essential or when it is ambiguous. If trade names are used, the name and location of the manufacturer must be given.


Scientific names


Upon its first use in the title, abstract, text, and materials and methods, the common name of a species should be followed by the scientific name (genus, species and authority) in parentheses. However, for well-known species, the scientific name may be omitted from the article title. If no common name exists in English, the scientific name should be used only.


Botanical nomenclature


All papers must conform to the latest edition of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature. Upon its first use in the title, abstract and text, the common name of a species should be followed by the scientific name (genus, species and authority) in parentheses.


Genetic nomenclature


Standard genetic nomenclature should be used. For further information, including relevant websites, authors should refer to the genetic nomenclature guide in Trends in Genetics (Elsevier Science, 1998).


Nucleotide sequence data can be submitted in electronic form to any of the three major collaborative databases: DDBJ, EMBL or GenBank. It is only necessary to submit to one database as data are exchanged between DDBJ, EMBL and GenBank on a daily basis. The suggested wording for referring to accession number information is: "These sequence data have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession number U12345".


Addresses are as follows:


DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ): http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp;


EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Submissions: http://www.ebi.ac.uk;


GenBank: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.

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Figures


As a step towards becoming an online-only journal, JIPB has launched "all-in-color" for its online content. Authors are strongly encouraged to submit all their plates, figures and graphs in color. Color figures and color diagrams will appear in the online version of JIPB, FREE OF CHARGE. Please note that this only applies to the online version of the journal. The authors may still have their articles printed in color, however, the previous charge for color prints will apply and the authors will have to indicate which figures should be in color. Exact figure charges are listed in section 17.


All illustrations (line drawings and photographs) are classified as figures. Figures should be cited in consecutive order in the text. Each figure should be labeled at the top of the page, indicating the name of the author(s), figure number and orientation.


Although low quality images are adequate for review purposes, print publication requires high quality images to prevent the final product being blurred or fuzzy. We recommend that figures are created using Adobe Photoshop or similar software. All figures are required to be in TIFF, JPEG or PowerPoint (PPT) format. A resolution of at least 600 dpi is required for most figures when saved as JPEG or TIFF. For all-black line art, 1,000 dpi is needed. Color figures should be set up as CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) and not as RGB (red, green, blue) for hard-copy print purposes. If you use PPT, please send the original PPT files. Use only basic PPT fonts and do not draw lines that are less than .25 points thick. Use shaded or colored fills instead of pattern fills, except where pattern fills would be clearer if the figure were to be printed in black and white. Images imported into PPT should have at least 600 dpi resolution. The width of one column is 80 mm, and the two-column width is 170 mm. Magnifications should be indicated using a scale bar on the illustration. All figures must be supplied in camera-ready format.


Line figures should be supplied as sharp, preferably color graphs or diagrams, either professionally drawn or created by computer graphics package. Bar charts should be colored according to journal style as follows, from left to right: purple (filled), white with blue diagonal lines (45-degree right sloping lines), lime-green (filled), white with yellow diagonal lines (45-degree left sloping lines). For more info on bar chart colors, please see the following PDF example. Note that colored charts will only appear in the journal's online version. The hard-copy version will still be printed black-and-white unless the authors request otherwise.


Photographs should be supplied as sharp, glossy, preferably color photographic prints and must be un-mounted. Individual photographs forming a composite figure should be of equal contrast to facilitate printing, and should be accurately squared. It is preferred that photos are grouped together into one or more plates.


Detailed figure requirements follow:
Figure Font Requirements
      Typeface: Arial
      Figure labels (A, B, C, etc.) font size: 12 pt, bold
      Figure caption font size: 8 pt, no bold
      X-axis, y-axis labels font size: 9 pt, no bold
      X-axis, y-axis units: 8 pt, no bold
      All other text inside figures: 8 pt, no bold


Lettering must be included and should be sized to 8 point size (Arial + overstrike) for line figures and photographs; figure numbers should be sized to be 9 point size (Arial + overstrike). Magnifications should be indicated using a scale bar on the illustration. All figures must be supplied in camera-ready format.


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Figure Legends


Legends should be concise and comprehensive: the figure and its legend must be self-sufficient, understandable without reference to the text including definitions of any symbols used, and define/explain all abbreviations and units of measurement.

11. FREE ACCESS POLICY


JIPB is devoted to reaching as large an audience as possible with the following FreeAccess (FA) policies:

  •  •All newly published articles are Free Access for the first month after publication;
  •  •All papers in our Special Issues are Free Access;
  •  •All Editorials, Commentary and Prospective articles are Free Access;
  •  •The first issue of the year is Free Access;
  •  •In each issue, two papers selected by the Chief Editor are Free Access;


Free Access allows you to read and download the article for free, regardless of whether you have a subscription to JIPB or not.


12. SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

Supplementary material is not essential to the article but provides greater depth and background and may include tables, figures, videos, datasets, etc. This material can be submitted with your manuscript and will appear online, without editing or typesetting. There is no page limit for supplementary materials. Guidelines on how to prepare this material and which formats and file sizes to use can be found at: http://authorservices.wiley.com/bauthor/suppmat.asp.

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13. MANUSCRIPT PROCESSING


All manuscripts received will be subjected to an initial validity check, including the quality and the format, by the Manuscript Manager. Those that pass the first examination will be assigned to an Associate Editor. The Associate Editor will make an initial evaluation of the scientific content. He will also check the language and make sure that the manuscript is written in clear and concise English.


If the Associate Editor finds the manuscript acceptable he will assign a Co-Editor from his theme, who will evaluate the manuscript in detail. The Co-Editor assigns three or more peer reviewers for each manuscript. The reviewers evaluate the manuscript in terms of the importance of research questions, the rigor of the experimental evidence and protocols, and the significance of the conclusion. All manuscripts tentatively accepted will be forwarded to the Associate Editor for a final decision. It is important to note that the Editor-in-Chief of JIPB reserves the right to change the final decision on any submission at any stage.


A decision letter will be emailed to the corresponding author once the Associate Editor or Editor-in-Chief has made the final decision. The corresponding author can view the comments provided by the reviewers online at http://www.submit-jipb.net. If the manuscript is accepted without revision, the editorial office will contact the corresponding author if additional files/documents are needed.


If the manuscript needs revision, the corresponding author will have to read the comments carefully and make corresponding changes, and explain point-by-point what has been changed and why if the reviewer's recommendation has not been followed. Revised manuscript files should be uploaded using the manuscript handling system.


A manuscript that contains good scientific content but requires extensive revision will, as a matter of JIPB policy, be declined. If the manuscript is declined with encouragement from the Co-Editor to resubmit, the resubmission must be done online within the time-frame asked. A note should be included indicating that it is a resubmission, with its previous tracking number clearly stated.


If at any time during the review process the corresponding author has a question regarding the status of a manuscript or the nature of the peer review process, please contact the Manuscript Manager at: jipb@ibcas.ac.cn.

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14. PROOFS


The editorial office will notify the corresponding author via e-mail to electronically retrieve page proofs. The corresponding author will have access to one PDF file, which will contain: (a) PDF pages (includes figures and tables) and (b) a reprint order form. The corresponding author should return (a) the proofread and corrected original proof, (b) original figures if applicable, and (c) the completed reprint order form. Although the editorial staff may change the wording based on their understanding, the corresponding author is fully responsible for the final content of the manuscript. The proof is the last chance to correct mistakes. With the exception of typographical or minor clerical errors, no changes will be made in the manuscript at the proof stage. You may correct any of the mistakes made by editorial staff for free, however, correcting more than five of your own mistakes will be subject to additional charges (US$ 2 each), and even re-evaluation by the Co-Editor.

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15. JIPB COVER PICTURE SELECTION


Each cover of JIPB will have an illustration related to one of the articles published. Authors who would like to have a color photograph considered should submit a high resolution image online via Bench>Press when submitting a manuscript, or email the photograph to the manuscript tracking office at jipb@ibcas.ac.cn. All cover pictures should be relevant to the content of the article published in the issue, and have artistic value. The decision for the cover selection is made by the Editor-in-Chief. When a photograph has been selected, the author will be contacted by the editorial office for additional information concerning the cover caption. If an author does not hold the copyright for a submitted image, he/she is responsible for obtaining the necessary permission to use the image in JIPB. In return, the color cover will also be used for the offprints of your paper without additional charge.

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16. OFFPRINTS


Thirty offprints will be supplied to the corresponding author once required. A charge of 500 RMB ($ 80 USD) will be levied for each article. For more than 30 offprints, an extra charge will be levied (150 RMB for every 10 additional copies).


17. PUBLICATION FEES


There is no fee for submitting a manuscript to JIPB. However, a charge of 400 RMB (US$ 65) for each printed page, 2,000 RMB (US$ 340) for each color figure (or figure plate) will be levied on accepted manuscripts. Checks should be made payable to West Haidian District Subbranch, Beijing Branch, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC); Account No: 0200004509088100989; Address: 65 West Road, Beisihuan, Haidian District, Beijing, 100083; Swift code: ICBKCNBJBJM. If authors have difficulty paying the publication costs, please contact the Editorial Office. The Editorial Board may waive the page charges under special circumstances.

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18. CORRECTION AND RETRACTION


If necessary, corrections of significant errors in published articles will be published in a later issue of the Journal. A correction published in the print journal will also be published as a correction in the online journal and will be linked to the original article. Articles may be retracted by their authors, academic or institutional sponsor, editor, or publisher because of pervasive errors or unsubstantiated or irreproducible data. A correction or retraction, so labeled, will appear in a prominent section of the Journal, and will be listed in the content page It will also include the title of the original article. The text of a retraction will explain why the article is being retracted and will include a bibliographic reference.

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19. EDITORIAL OFFICE CONTACT DETAILS


The Editorial Office

Journal of Integrative Plant Biology

Institute of Botany

Chinese Academy of Sciences
No. 20 Nanxincun, Xiangshan

Beijing 100093

China

Tel: +86 10 6283 6133; Fax: +86 10 8259 2636

E-mail: jipb@ibcas.ac.cn

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Instructions to Authors
12125.pdf

Editorial Board
Editorial Board and Staff
   
Chief Editor
   

 

Chun-Ming Liu
Institute of Botany, CAS, China
cmliu@ibcas.ac.cn
   
Associate Editors

 

Ian Thomas Baldwin

Responsible for: Molecular Ecology and Evolution
Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Germany
baldwin@ice.mpg.de

   
Chris Hawes
Responsible for: Cell and Developmental Biology
Oxford Brookes University, UK
chawes@brookes.ac.uk
   
Leon V. Kochian

Responsible for: Molecular Physiology
Cornell University, USA
lvk1@cornell.edu

   
William J. Lucas

Responsible for: Plant-environmental Interactions
University of California, Davis, USA
wjlucas@ucdavis.edu

   
Li-Jia Qu

Responsible for: Invited Review, Commentary, Minireviews, and Special Issue
Peking University, China
qulj@pku.edu.cn

   
Mark Stitt

Responsible for: Metabolism and Biochemistry
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Germany
mstitt@mpimp-golm.mpg.de

   
Wei-Cai Yang

Responsible for: Plant Reproduction Biology
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS, China
wcyang@genetics.ac.cn

 
Co-Editors (in alphabetical order):
 
Cell and Developmental Biology
   
Tobias I. Baskin
University of Massachusetts Amherst
USA
Philip W. Becraft
Iowa State University
USA
   
Anja Geitmann
Université de Montréal
Canada
Jirong Huang
Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, CAS
China
   
Jianping Hu
Michigan State University
USA
Patrick Moreau
Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2
France
   
Lars Ostergaard
John Innes Centre
UK
Haiyun Ren
Beijing Normal University
China
   
Frans E. Tax
University of Arizona
USA
Stephan Wenkel
University of Tübingen
Germany
   
Qi Xie
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS
China
Zhenbiao Yang
University of California, Riverside
USA
   
Jian-Ru Zuo
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS
China
   
Functional Omics and Systems Biology
   
Natalia Doudareva
Purdue University
USA
Sanwen Huang
The Institute of Vegetable and Flowers, CAAS
China
   
Hai-Chun Jing
Institute of Botany, CAS
China
Jin-Sheng Lai
China Agricultural University
China
   
Zhongchi Liu
University of Maryland
USA
Jan Traas
University of Lyon
France
   
Tomohiko Tsuge
Kyoto University
Japan
   
Metabolism and Biochemistry
   
Vincent Bulone
AlbaNova University Centre
Sweden
Katie Dehesh
University of California, Davis
USA
   
Shan Lu
Nanjing University
China
Xiaoquan Qi
Institute of Botany, CAS
China
   
Trevor Wang
John Innes Centre
UK
   
Molecular Ecology and Evolution
   
Jiquan Chen
The University of Toledo
USA
Nicole van Dam
Radboud University Nijmegen
The Netherlands
   
Ivan Galis
Okayama University
Japan
Hongya Gu
Peking University
China
   
Catherine Kidner
University of Edinburgh
UK
Yonggen Lou
Zhejiang University
China
   
Bao-Hua Song
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
USA
Xiao-Quan Wang
Institute of Botany, CAS
China
   
Jianqiang Wu
Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS
China
   
Molecular Physiology
   
Jiping Liu
Cornell University
USA
Cong-Ming Lu
Institute of Botany, CAS
China
   
Martin AJ Parry
Rothamsted Research
UK
Qian Qian
China National Rice Research Institute
China
   
Robert Sharp
University of Missouri
USA
Jianmin Wan
Institute of Crop Science, CAAS
China
   
Jianhua Zhang
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
China
Li-Xin Zhang
Institute of Botany, CAS
China
   
Plant-environmental Interactions
   
Kurt Fagerstedt
University of Helsinki
Finland
Toru Fujiwara
University of Tokyo
Japan
   
Zhizhong Gong
China Agricultural University
China
Hongwei Guo
Peking University
China
   
Ildoo Hwang
POSTECH Biotech Center
Korea
Hailing Jin
University of California
USA
   
Ulrik John
Victorian Department of Primary Industries
Australia
Pradeep Kachroo
University of Kentucky
USA
   
Jia Li
Lanzhou University
China
Jianming Li
University of Michigan
USA
   
Dong Liu
Tsinghua University
China
Minami Matsui
Genomic Sciences Center, Riken
Japan
   
Christophe Robaglia
CNRS-CEA-Université de la Mediterranée
France
Giovanna Serino
Università La Sapienza
Italy
   
Bart Thomma
Wageningen University
The Netherlands
Daoxin Xie
Tsinghua University
China
   
Plant Reproduction Biology
   
Mauro Cresti
Università di Siena
Italy
John Harada
University of California, Davis
USA
   
Tetsuya Higashiyama
Nagoya University
Japan
Mark Johnson
Brown University
USA
   
Yaoguang Liu
South China Agricultural University
China
Hong Ma
Fudan University
China
   
Remko Offringa
Leiden University
The Netherlands
Imran Siddiqi
Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology
India
   
Meng-Xiang Sun
Wuhan University
China
Yong-Biao Xue
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, CAS
China
   
Dabing Zhang
Shanghai Jiaotong University
China


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