期刊名称:GM CROPS & FOOD-BIOTECHNOLOGY IN AGRICULTURE AND THE FOOD CHAIN

ISSN:2164-5698
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS, KARL JOHANS GATE 5, OSLO, NORWAY, NO-0154
  出版社网址:https://www.tandfonline.com/
期刊网址:https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/kgmc20/current
影响因子:3.074
主题范畴:BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY;    PLANT SCIENCES
变更情况:

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



About the journal

Aims and scope

GM Crops & Food - Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chain aims to publish high quality research papers, reviews, and commentaries on a wide range of topics involving genetically modified (GM) crops in agriculture and genetically modified food. The journal provides a platform for research papers addressing fundamental questions in the development, testing, and application of transgenic crops. The journal further covers topics relating to socio-economic issues, commercialization, trade and societal issues. GM Crops & Food aims to provide an international forum on all issues related to GM crops, especially toward meaningful communication between scientists and policy-makers. 

GM Crops & Food will publish relevant and high-impact original research with a special focus on novelty-driven studies with the potential for application. The journal also publishes authoritative review articles on current research and policy initiatives, and commentary on broad perspectives regarding genetically modified crops. The journal serves a wide readership including scientists, breeders, and policy-makers, as well as a wider community of readers (educators, policy makers, scholars, science writers and students) interested in agriculture, medicine, biotechnology, investment, and technology transfer. 

Topics covered include, but are not limited to: 
• Production and analysis of transgenic crops 
• Gene insertion studies 
• Gene silencing 
• Factors affecting gene expression 
• Post-translational analysis 
• Molecular farming 
• Field trial analysis 
• Commercialization of modified crops 
• Safety and regulatory affairs 

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 
• Biofuels 
• Data from field trials 
• Development of transformation technology 
• Elimination of pollutants (Bioremediation) 
• Gene silencing mechanisms 
• Genome Editing 
• Herbicide resistance 
• Molecular farming 
• Pest resistance 
• Plant reproduction (e.g., male sterility, hybrid breeding, apomixis) 
• Plants with altered composition 
• Tolerance to abiotic stress 
• Transgenesis in agriculture 
• Biofortification and nutrients improvement 
• Genomic, proteomic and bioinformatics methods used for developing GM cops 

ECONOMIC, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES 
• Commercialization 
• Consumer attitudes 
• International bodies 
• National and local government policies 
• Public perception, intellectual property, education, (bio)ethical issues 
• Regulation, environmental impact and containment 
• Socio-economic impact 
• Food safety and security 
• Risk assessments 

Why publish in GM Crops & Food? 
• Wide Readership 
• Rapid Review and Publication 
• Broad visibility 
• Open Access options 
• Online submission 

GM Crops & Food offers an expedited review of manuscripts while ensuring a high-quality and rigorous peer review. Authors may submit to the journal online at http://gmcrops.msubmit.net/cgi-bin/main.plex 
Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Group, 530 Walnut Street, Suite 850, Philadelphia, PA 19106. 
 

Journal information

Print ISSN: 2164-5698 Online ISSN: 2164-5701
4 issues per year
GM Crops is abstracted/indexed in:
  • CABI                                                   
    - Agricultural Economics Database        
    - Animal Science Database                  
    - Biocontrol News and Information (Online)        
    - Biofuels Abstracts                             
    - Crop Science Database                      
    - Forest Science Database                    
    - Grasslands and Forage Abstract (Online)               
    - Plant Breeding Abstracts (Online)      
    - Plant Genetic Resources Abstracts (Online)      
    - Plant Genetics and Breeding Database              
    - Plant Growth Regulator Abstracts (Online)             
    - Plant Protection Database                 
    - Review of Agricultural Entomology (Online)       
    - Review of Plant Pathology (Online)    
    - Rice Abstracts (Online)                      
    - Rural Development Abstracts (Online)      
    - Seed Abstracts (Online)                     
    - Soils and Fertilizers (Online)             
    - Sugar Industry Abstracts (Online)       
  • National Library of Medicine              
    - PubMed Central (PMC)                                   
  • U.S. National Library of Medicine       
    - MEDLINE

Taylor & Francis make every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the "Content") contained in our publications. However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and views expressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, and are not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. The accuracy of the Content should not be relied upon and should be independently verified with primary sources of information. Taylor & Francis shall not be liable for any losses, actions, claims, proceedings, demands, costs, expenses, damages, and other liabilities whatsoever or howsoever caused arising directly or indirectly in connection with, in relation to, or arising out of the use of the Content. Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/page/terms-and-conditions .

Publication history


Currently known as:

  • GM Crops & Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chain (2012 - current)

Formerly known as

  • GM Crops (1900 - 2011)

Instructions to Authors

GM Crops and Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chain is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing high-quality, original research. Please see the journal’s Aims & Scope for information about its focus and peer-review policy.

Please note that the journal only publishes manuscripts in English.

GM Crops and Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chain accepts the following types of article:

  • Original Research Papers – presenting high quality original research
  • Reviews - Comprehensive review of research and developments of significance in the field, highlighting problems to overcome and future directions for research.
  • Short Communications – discussing concise, but important, breakthrough data or research not embedded within a complex story
  • Technical Reports - describe new approaches, methods, process or progress of technical research
  • Commentaries – evaluate recent research findings, professional practices and/or current issues in the subject area.
  • Meeting Reports - summarizes presentations from recent meetings in the field. Meeting reports should only be submitted after prior agreement from the Editor.

Article publishing charges

There are no submission fees for this journal, but the charges detailed below may be applicable upon acceptance.

You can choose to publish your article open access at our Open Select rate of $2,950. If you choose to publish open access, no additional page or color charges will apply.

You can choose to publish your article open access (see information below). If you choose to publish open access, no additional page or color charges will apply.

For all other articles, a page charge of $110 per page applies to the published typeset pages. Taylor and Francis operates a waiver policy for low- and lower-middle income economies which applies to page charges. Corresponding authors with primary affiliations based in countries defined by the World Bank as ‘ Low-Income Economies’ are entitled to apply for a 100% page charge waiver and corresponding authors with primary affiliations based in countries defined by the World Bank as ‘ Lower-Middle-Income Economies’ are entitled to apply for a 50% discount on the normal page charge.

If you think you may be eligible for a page charge discount or waiver, please check that your country is one of those defined by the World Bank as being low-income or lower-middle-income. Submit through the journal’s online submission system in the usual way, following the Instructions for Authors. During the process of submitting your manuscript online you will be asked whether you wish to request a discount or waiver. Please select the appropriate option at this stage. Please note that discount and waiver requests must be made when you first submit your manuscript. It will not normally be possible to process requests made on any subsequent revisions.

Color figures will be reproduced in color in your online article free of charge. If it is necessary for the figures to be reproduced in color in the print version, a charge will apply. Charges for color figures in print are $225 per figure for the first four figures and figures five and above will be charged at $80 per figure.

Depending on your location, these charges may be subject to local taxes.

There is no fee for hosting online supplemental material.

Peer review

Taylor & Francis is committed to peer-review integrity and upholding the highest standards of review. Once your paper has been assessed for suitability by the editor, it will then be single blind peer-reviewed by expert referees.  Find out more about what to expect during peer review and read our guidance on publishing ethics.

Preparing your paper

All authors submitting to medicine, biomedicine, health sciences, allied and public health journals should conform to the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals, prepared by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE).

Style guidelines

Please refer to these quick style guidelines when preparing your paper, rather than any published articles or a sample copy.

Please use American spelling style consistently throughout your manuscript.

Please use double quotation marks, except where “a quotation is ‘within’ a quotation”. Please note that long quotations should be indented without quotation marks.

Submissions to GM Crops and Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chainshould follow the style guidelines described in Scientific Style and Format: The CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers (8th ed.). Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed.) should be consulted for spelling.

Nomenclature guidelines

We encourage use of standardized nomenclature in your manuscript. The International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology (IUPHAR) Committee on Receptor Nomenclature and Drug Classification (NC-IUPHAR) is the only international body responsible for the nomenclature of receptors and ion channels. Its guidelines are accessible via http://www.iuphar-db.org/nomenclature.html.

References

References should be presented in a separate section at the end of the document, in accordance with CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers guidelines. The references should be listed and numbered based on the order of their first citation. Every reference should be assigned its own unique number. References should not be repeated in the list, with each mention given a different reference number, nor should multiple references be combined under a single reference number. Superscripted digits should be used for in-text citations. Superscripted citations should follow periods, commas, closed quotation marks, question marks, and exclamation points. Mention of a specific reference within the course of a sentence should be proceed by “ref.” (e.g., “For a review, see ref. 20” or “For reviews, see refs. 20–25”).

Author listings in references should be formatted as indicated below.

1 author

Smith A.

2 to 10 authors

Smith A, Jones B, Smythe C, Jonesy D, Smitty E, Jonesi F, Smithe G, Janes H, Smithee I, Junes J.

More than 10 authors

Smith A, Jones B, Smythe C, Jonesy D, Smitty E, Jonesi F, Smithe G, Janes H, Smithee I, Junes J, et al.

Models from US National Library of Medicine (NLM) resources (e.g., MEDLINE, Index Medicus), BIOSIS Serial Sources, and other resources that follow ISO 4 standardsshould be employed for abbreviating journal titles in the reference section. Examples of common reference types appear below.

Journal article

12. Taylor J, Ogilvie BC. A conceptual model of adaptation to retirement among athletes: a meta-analysis. J Appl Sport Psychol .1994;6(1):1–20. doi:10.1080/10413209408406462.

Book

2. Duke JA. Handbook of phytochemical constituents of GRAS herbs and other economic plants. Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press; 2001.

Edited book chapter

34. Gordon S. Career transitions in competitive sport. In: Morris T, Summers J, editors. Sport psychology: theory, applications and issues. Milton (Australia): Wiley; 1995. p. 474–493.

Online/Website

8. United States Census Bureau. American housing survey: 2013 detailed tables . Washington (DC): United States Department of Commerce; 2014 Oct 16 [accessed 2014 Oct 21]. http://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2014/cb14-tps78.html.

Dissertation/Thesis

26. Allison N. Bacterial degradation of halogenated aliphatic acids [dissertation]. Nottingham (UK): Trent Polytechnic; 1981.

Conference presentation

4. Alfermann D, Gross A. Coping with career termination: it all depends on freedom of choice. Paper presented at: 9th Annual World Congress on Sport Psychology; 1997 Jan 23; Netanya, Israel.

Paper/Report

55. Grigg W, Moran R, Kuang M. National Indian education study. Washington (DC): National Center for Education Statistics; 2010. NCES publication 2010-462.

Checklist: what to include

  1. Author details. Please ensure everyone meeting the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) requirements for authorship is included as an author of your paper. All authors of a manuscript should include their full name and affiliation on the cover page of the manuscript. Where available, please also include ORCiDs and social media handles (Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn). One author will need to be identified as the corresponding author, with their email address normally displayed in the article PDF (depending on the journal) and the online article. Authors’ affiliations are the affiliations where the research was conducted. If any of the named co-authors moves affiliation during the peer-review process, the new affiliation can be given as a footnote. Please note that no changes to affiliation can be made after your paper is accepted. Read more on authorship.
  2. You can opt to include a video abstract with your article. Find out how these can help your work reach a wider audience, and what to think about when filming.
  3. Funding details. Please supply all details required by your funding and grant-awarding bodies as follows: 
    For single agency grants 
    This work was supported by the [Funding Agency] under Grant [number xxxx]. 
    For multiple agency grants 
    This work was supported by the [Funding Agency #1] under Grant [number xxxx]; [Funding Agency #2] under Grant [number xxxx]; and [Funding Agency #3] under Grant [number xxxx].
  4. Disclosure statement. This is to acknowledge any financial interest or benefit that has arisen from the direct applications of your research. Further guidance on what is a conflict of interest and how to disclose it.
  5. Data availability statement. If there is a data set associated with the paper, please provide information about where the data supporting the results or analyses presented in the paper can be found. Where applicable, this should include the hyperlink, DOI or other persistent identifier associated with the data set(s). Templates are also available to support authors.
  6. Data deposition. If you choose to share or make the data underlying the study open, please deposit your data in a recognized data repository prior to or at the time of submission. You will be asked to provide the DOI, pre-reserved DOI, or other persistent identifier for the data set.
  7. Geolocation information. Submitting a geolocation information section, as a separate paragraph before your acknowledgements, means we can index your paper’s study area accurately in JournalMap’s geographic literature database and make your article more discoverable to others. More information.
  8. Supplemental online material. Supplemental material can be a video, dataset, fileset, sound file or anything which supports (and is pertinent to) your paper. We publish supplemental material online via Figshare. Find out more about supplemental material and how to submit it with your article.
  9. Figures. Figures should be high quality (1200 dpi for line art, 600 dpi for grayscale and 300 dpi for color, at the correct size). Figures should be supplied in one of our preferred file formats: EPS, PS, JPEG, GIF, or Microsoft Word (DOC or DOCX). For information relating to other file types, please consult our Submission of electronic artworkdocument.
  10. Tables. Tables should present new information rather than duplicating what is in the text. Readers should be able to interpret the table without reference to the text. Please supply editable files.
  11. Equations. If you are submitting your manuscript as a Word document, please ensure that equations are editable. More information about mathematical symbols and equations.
  12. Units. Please use SI units (non-italicized).

Author agreement / Use of third-party material

Authors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyrighted material from other sources and are required to sign an agreement for the transfer of copyright to the publisher. As an author you are required to secure permission if you want to reproduce any figure, table or extract text from any other source. This applies to direct reproduction as well as "derivative reproduction" (for which you have created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source). Please see our page on requesting permission to reproduce work(s) under copyright for more guidance. Authors are required to sign an agreement for the transfer of copyright to the publisher. All accepted manuscripts, artwork, and photographs become property of the publisher.

Guidelines for medicine and health publications

Disclosure of interest

Please include your disclosure statement under the subheading “Disclosure of interest.” If you have no interests to declare, please state this (suggested wording: The authors report no conflict of interest). For all NIH/Wellcome-funded papers, the grant number(s) must be included in the declaration of interest statement. Read more on declaring conflicts of interest here.

Clinical Trials Registry

In order to be published in a Taylor & Francis journal, all clinical trials must have been registered in a public repository at the beginning of the research process (prior to patient enrollment). Trial registration numbers should be included in the abstract, with full details in the methods section. The registry should be publicly accessible (at no charge), open to all prospective registrants, and managed by a not-for-profit organization. For a list of registries that meet these requirements, please visit the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP). The registration of all clinical trials facilitates the sharing of information among clinicians, researchers, and patients, enhances public confidence in research, and is in accordance with the ICMJE guidelines.

Complying with ethics of experimentation

Please ensure that all research reported in submitted papers has been conducted in an ethical and responsible manner, and is in full compliance with all relevant codes of experimentation and legislation. All papers which report in vivo experiments or clinical trials on humans or animals must include a written statement in the Methods section. This should explain that all work was conducted with the formal approval of the local human subject or animal care committees (institutional and national), and that clinical trials have been registered as legislation requires. Authors who do not have formal ethics review committees should include a statement that their study follows the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.

Consent. All authors are required to follow the ICMJE requirements on privacy and informed consent from patients and study participants. Please confirm that any patient, service user, or participant (or that person’s parent or legal guardian) in any research, experiment, or clinical trial described in your paper has given written consent to the inclusion of material pertaining to themselves, that they acknowledge that they cannot be identified via the paper; and that you have fully anonymized them. Where someone is deceased, please ensure you have written consent from the family or estate. Authors may use this Patient Consent Form, which should be completed, saved, and sent to the journal if requested. 

Health and safety. Please confirm that all mandatory laboratory health and safety procedures have been complied with in the course of conducting any experimental work reported in your paper. Please ensure your paper contains all appropriate warnings on any hazards that may be involved in carrying out the experiments or procedures you have described, or that may be involved in instructions, materials, or formulae.

Please include all relevant safety precautions; and cite any accepted standard or code of practice. Authors working in animal science may find it useful to consult the International Association of Veterinary Editors’ Consensus Author Guidelines on Animal Ethics and Welfare and Guidelines for the Treatment of Animals in Behavioral Research and Teaching. When a product has not yet been approved by an appropriate regulatory body for the use described in your paper, please specify this, or that the product is still investigational.

Availability of materials and data

It is expected that authors should be able to provide any materials and/or protocols used in published experiments to other qualified researchers for their own use. Materials include (but are not limited to): cells DNA, antibodies, reagents, organisms, mouse strains, and Drosophila strains. These should be made available in a timely manner and it is acceptable to request reasonable payment to cover the cost of maintenance and transport.

For materials such as mutant strains and cell lines, authors should use established public repositories and provide relevant accession numbers wherever possible.

Repositories include:

Papers reporting protein or DNA sequences and molecular structures should provide an accession number 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.”

Submitting your paper

GM Crops & Food receives all manuscript submissions electronically via its Editorial Manager site located at http://www.editorialmanager.com/gmcrops/Default.aspx. Editorial Manager allows for rapid submission of original and revised manuscripts, and facilitates the review process and internal communication between authors, editors, and reviewers via a web-based platform. Editorial Manager technical support can be accessed at http://www.editorialmanager.com/robohelp/10.1/index.htm. If you have any other requests, please contact KGMC-peerreview@journals.tandf.co.uk. If you are submitting in LaTeX, please convert the files to PDF beforehand (you will also need to upload your LaTeX source files with the PDF). Your manuscript must be accompanied by a statement that it has not been published elsewhere and that it has not been submitted simultaneously for publication elsewhere.

We recommend that if your manuscript is accepted for publication, you keep a copy of your accepted manuscript. For possible uses of your accepted manuscript, please see our page on sharing your work.

CrossRef Similarity Check

Please note that GM Crops and Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chainuses CrossRef Similarity Check™ (Powered by iThenticate) to screen papers for unoriginal material. By submitting your paper to the journal you are agreeing to originality checks during the peer-review and production processes.

Data Sharing Policy

This journal applies the Taylor & Francis Basic Data Sharing Policy. Authors are encouraged to share or make open the data supporting the results or analyses presented in their paper where this does not violate the protection of human subjects or other valid privacy or security concerns.

Authors are encouraged to deposit the dataset(s) in a recognized data repository that can mint a persistent digital identifier, preferably a digital object identifier (DOI) and recognizes a long-term preservation plan. If you are uncertain about where to deposit your data, please see this information regarding repositories.

Authors are further encouraged to cite any data sets referenced in the article and provide a Data Availability Statement.

At the point of submission, you will be asked if there is a data set associated with the paper. If you reply yes, you will be asked to provide the DOI, pre-registered DOI, hyperlink, or other persistent identifier associated with the data set(s). If you have selected to provide a pre-registered DOI, please be prepared to share the reviewer URL associated with your data deposit, upon request by reviewers.

Where one or multiple data sets are associated with a manuscript, these are not formally peer reviewed as a part of the journal submission process. It is the author’s responsibility to ensure the soundness of data. Any errors in the data rest solely with the producers of the data set(s).

Complying with funding agencies

We will deposit all National Institutes of Health or Wellcome Trust-funded papers into PubMedCentral on behalf of authors, meeting the requirements of their respective open access (OA) policies. If this applies to you, please ensure that you have included the appropriate funding bodies in your submission’s funding details section. You can check various funders’ OA policy mandates here and find out more about sharing your workhere.

Open access

This journal gives authors the option to publish open access via our Open Select publishing program, making it free to access online immediately on publication. Many funders mandate publishing your research open access; you can check open access funder policies and mandates here.

Taylor & Francis Open Select gives you, your institution or funder the option of paying an article publishing charge (APC) to make an article open access. Please contact openaccess@tandf.co.uk if you would like to find out more, or go to our Author Services website.

For more information on license options, embargo periods and APCs for this journal please go here.

Proofs

Page proofs are sent to the corresponding author using Taylor & Francis’ Central Article Tracking System (CATS). They should be carefully checked and returned within 48 hours.

Cover image submission

GM Crops and Food: Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food Chain selects a cover illustration from accepted articles, or from submitted images that are designed to accompany an accepted article.

The cover illustration should be scientifically interesting and visually attractive. The illustration need not be a figure from the paper, but should be closely related to the subject of the paper. If you are interested in submitting a figure for use on the cover, please email a high-resolution version of your image, conforming to the specifications below, and an explanatory caption of 50–60 words to the Editor-in-Chief.

All potential cover images should be sized to fit on a single letter size (8.5" x 11") page. Please remove all text, captions, etc. from the image. If you have variations of the image, you may send additional files. Please send no more than two alternate versions.

Accepted formats and resolution:

  • PSD (Adobe Photoshop: if graphics are built with layers, do not flatten), 300 dpi, CMYK at 100% size.
  • TIF, 300 dpi, CMYK at 100% size
  • JPG, 300 dpi highest quality, CMYK at 100% size.
  • EPS (scalable vector line art)
  • AI (Adobe Illustrator)

Reprints

Authors for whom we receive a valid e-mail address will be provided an opportunity to purchase reprints of individual articles, or copies of the complete print issue. These authors will also be given complimentary access to their final article on Taylor & Francis Online.

My Authored Works

On publication, you will be able to view, download and check your article’s metrics (downloads, citations and Altmetric data) via My Authored Works on Taylor & Francis Online. We are committed to promoting and increasing the visibility of your article. Here are some tips and ideas on how you can work with us to promote your research.

UPDATED 01-08-2018

 


Editorial Board
Editors-in-Chief
Naglaa A. Abdallah - Cairo University, Giza, EG 
Channapatna S. Prakash - Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, AL, US
   
Editorial Board
Francisco J. L. Aragão - Embrapa Recursos Genéticos e Biotecnologia, Brasília, Brasília, BR 
Atanas Atanassov - President Emeritus of the Black Sea Biotechnology Association; Manager of the Joint Genomic Center, Sofia, BG 
Carlos A. Blanco - US Department of Agriculture, Riverdale, MD, US 
Derek C. Burke - Chair of the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes, 1988–1997, Norwich, UK 
Rachel Chikwamba - Pretoria, ZA 
Jihong Liu  Clarke - Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, Ås, NO 
Swapan K. Datta - ICAR, New Delhi, IN 
Rick DeRose - Syngenta Biotechnology, Research Triangle Park, NC, US 
Premendra D. Dwivedi - Indian Institute of Toxicology Research, Lucknow, IN 
Claude M. Fauquet - ILTAB, Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, MO, US 
Fawzy Georges - NRC Plant Biotechnology Institute, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, CA 
Rosemarie Hammond - USDA ARS BA PSI, Beltsville, MD, US 
Avtar K. Handa - Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, US 
Ebtissam H.A. Hussein - Cairo University, Giza, EG 
William D. Hutchison - St. Paul, MN, US 
Vincenza Ilardi - Centro di Ricerca per la Patologia Vegetale, Rome, IT 
Hans-Jörg Jacobsen - Hannover University, Hannover, DE 
Huw D. Jones - Institute of Biological, Environmental, & Rural Sciences, Aberystwyth University, UK
Jerry Keith - National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD, US 
Drew L. Kershen - University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, US 
Jens Kossmann - Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, ZA 
P. Ananda Kumar - NRC on Plant Biotechnology, New Delhi, IN
Jochen Kumlehn - Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research,Gatersleben, DE 
Margit Laimer - BOKU University of Agricultural Sciences, Vienna, AT 
Louis Lemkow - Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, ES 
Changming Lu - Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Wuhan, CN 
Shanfa Lu - North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, US 
Magdy Madkour - Ain-Shams University, Cairo, EG 
Steve Marinker - Havas PR UK, London, UK 
Lucia Martinelli - Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all'Adige, IT 
Henry I. Miller - Stanford University, Stanford, CA, US 
Sylvia Pfaff - Food Information Service Europe, Bad Bentheim, DE 
Qiudeng Que - Syngenta Biotechnology, Research Triangle Park, NC, US 
Søren K. Rasmussen - University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, DK 
Alan Raybould - Syngenta Biotechnology, Bracknell, Berkshire, UK 
James Register - Pioneer Hi-Bred International, A DuPont Company, Johnston, IA, US 
Hajime Sakai - DuPont Crop Genetics, Wilmington, DE, US 
Bo Shen - Pioneer Hi-Bred International, A DuPont Company, Johnston, IA, US 
Shigeru Shigeoka - Kinki University, Nakamachi, JP 
Ashok Shrawat - Monsanto Company, Chesterfield, MO, US 
Shoba Sivasankar - Pioneer Hi-Bred International, A DuPont Company, Johnston, IA, US 
Beat Späth - Public Affairs Manager, Green Biotechnology Europe, EuropaBio, Brussels, BE 
Jeff Stein - Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, MO, US
Fumio Takaiwa - National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Tsukuba, JP
Mario Tavazza - ENEA, BAS-Biotec Gen, Rome, IT
Roger Thilmony - Albany, CA, US
David Tribe - University of Melbourne, Parkville, AU
Vicki Vance - University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, US 
Hervé Vanderschuren - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, CH
Kan Wang - Iowa State University, Ames, IA, US
Wei Wei, Institute of Botany, CAS, Beijing, CN
Oliver Yu - Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, MO, US
Li-Hua Zhu - Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Alnarp, SE

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