期刊名称:JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
|
Description

The Journal of Structural Biology publishes papers dealing with the structural analysis of living material at every level of organization by all methods that lead to an understanding of biological function in terms of molecular and supermolecular structure.
Techniques covered include:
- Light microscopy including confocal microscopy
- All types of electron microscopy
- X-ray diffraction
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
- Scanning force microscopy, scanning probe microscopy, and tunneling microscopy
- Digital image processing
- Computational insights into structure
|
Instructions to Authors
|
The Journal of Structural Biology (J. Struct. Biol., JSB) publishes papers dealing with the structural analysis of biological matter at all levels of organization and the functional connotations of such observations. The field covered by the journal extends from individual macromolecules to cells and tissues with emphasis on the supramolecular (e.g. complexes and machines) and subcellular (e.g., membranes, compartments, cytoskeleton) levels of the structural hierarchy.
Novel applications of and methodological innovations in electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, probe microscopy, and light microscopy as well as aspects of computational biology image processing, bioinformatics and structural prediction, and other biophysical techniques yielding structural information are of interest to the journal. In the context of structural cell biology, papers dealing with cellular architecture and dynamics are particularly welcomed. We see biomineralization as an important emerging area.
Preference will be given to research that correlates structural results with functional, biochemical, biophysical, immunological, or genetic data on the system under study. Purely descriptive contributions should deal with the discovery of novel structural entities of biological significance or novel insights from innovative imaging modalities. A limited number of reviews (usually invited) will be published to keep the reader abreast of recent progress in the various fields of structural biology and advances in methodology.
Submission of manuscripts. Manuscripts may be submitted directly to either editor, Dr. Alasdair C. Steven or Dr. Wolfgang Baumeister. We prefer that your initial submission be a PDF submitted electronically. Dr. Alasdair C. Steven c/o Journal of Structural Biology Editorial Office, 525 B Street, Suite 1900 San Diego, CA 92101-4495, USA Phone: 619-699-6324 Fax: 619-699-6700 E-mail: jsb@elsevier.com
Dr. Wolfgang Baumeister Max-Planck-Institut fur Biochemie Am Klopferspitz 18a D-82152 Martinsried bei Munich, Germany Phone: 49-89-8578-2642 Fax: 49-89-8578-2641 E-mail: jsb@elsevier.com
SUMMARY OF REQUIREMENTS
Submissions should be sent electronically via the journal Web site (http://www.elsevier.com/locate/yjsbi), e-mail (jsb@elsevier.com), FTP (ftp.elsevier.com, username: anon; password: essd4acc), or disk (JSB/Elsevier/Editorial Office/525 B Street, Suite 1900, San Diego, CA 9201-4495).
1. Submit initial manuscript and art as a single PDF file. This file should include text, figures, tables, and references. Please also submit an electronic cover letter. One hard copy of the manuscript, including original art, should be submitted to the JSB editorial office.
2. Double-space the text and number all pages consecutively, including references, tables, and figure legends. Conform to the general style of the journal and write in clear and grammatical English.
3. Suggest 4-6 competent reviewers (provide complete contact information, including e-mail) and individuals who may be excluded from the review process.
4. Designate the corresponding author on the title page and provide a complete mailing address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-ail address.
5. List keywords after the abstract.
6. Check the JSB homep age for the style in which references are cited.
7. Accepted manuscripts must be resubmitted as Microsoft Word or Rich-Text Format. Submit a single TIFF or EPS file containing all figures. Also submit one set of high-quality hard-copy figures at the desired gray scale, color balance and recommended final size. These will be used as a visual guideline in publishing the figures from electronic files.
Each manuscript must be accompanied by a letter stating the authors wish that it be evaluated for publication in Journal of Structural Biology. Authors are encouraged to suggest the names of 4-6 appropriate reviewers for the manuscript. If reviewers are suggested, please provide names, addresses, and telephone numbers. Authors may also request that a particular individual not serve as reviewer.
Original papers only will be considered. Manuscripts are accepted for review with the understanding that the same work has not been published, that it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere, and that its submission for publication has been approved by all of the authors and by the institution where the work was carried out; further, that any persons cited as a source of personal communications have approved such citation. Written authorization may be required at the editor's discretion. Articles and any other material published in the Journal of Structural Biology represent the opinions of the author(s) and should not be construed to reflect the opinions of the editor(s) or the publisher.
Authors submitting a manuscript do so on the understanding that if it is accepted for publication, copyright in the article, including the right to reproduce the article in all forms and media, shall be assigned exclusively to the publisher, except when the paper is the work of the U.S. government. The publisher will not refuse any reasonable request by the author for permission to reproduce any of his or her contributions to the journal.
Crystallization Notes and Structure Reports. In addition to regular full-length papers reporting crystal structures and novel methods and/or mechanisms of crystallization, the Journal of Structural Biology publishes two kinds of short communications - Crystallization Notes and Structure Reports.
The primary consideration for eligibility as a Crystallization Note is that the observations reported should have sufficient significance and originality to merit publication separate from the structure. That significance/originality should be described in the letter of submission. At least one of the following criteria must apply: i. significant novelty in crystallization method or expression strategy; ii. crystals of a membrane protein or large macromolecular complex; iii. 2D crystals (planar or helical/tubular) for EM analysis; iv. other significant novelty. For studies in which expression and crystallization have resulted from application of standard procedures, this information is more appropriately reported in the Materials and Methods section of the paper describing structure.
Structure Reports concisely document macromolecular crystal structures, including those emanating from structural genomics. Where no biological role is yet determined, these reports can be presented without such connections. In addition to appropriate quality of the reported structure, it is essential that the procedures used to prepare the protein and to determine the structure should be repeatable with the information provided. The manuscript should begin by describing the source of the protein, the means used to screen for or devise crystallization conditions, and the crystallization procedures and conditions and should include a table with the information listed in Table A.
A Crystallization Note or Structure Report should consist of an abstract, a single passage of text that should not be divided into sections labeled Introduction, Results, etc., but which may include declarative subtitles, and a brief References section, and should not exceed four printed pages (Crystallization Note) or five printed pages (Structure Report) including figures (1 page ~ 900 words/5000 characters).
For 3D crystals, crystal quality should be demonstrated with a crystal photograph as well as the diffraction data used to determine the unit cell parameters and space group symmetry. These data may be given in the form of a table summarizing the data collection statistics and/or precession photographs or pseudo-precession photographs generated from the diffraction data. These data will be reviewed but not necessarily included in the final publication. 2D crystals or helical filaments suitable for analysis by electron microscopy and/or electron crystallography should be documented by optical or computed diffractograms of electron diffractograms and, when possible, by filtered 2D projection images.
Minireviews. JSB will publish minireviews describing emerging concepts, important methodological advances, and research hypotheses on topics related to the journal's sphere of interest (see above). Including graphics, a minreview should be approximately four pages. Minireviews will be subject to the same review process as regular papers. Topics, including a summary of 1-2 paragraphs, may be proposed to either editor.
Paper of the Year. The Journal of Structural Biology Paper of the Year Award is conferred annually and consists of a cash prize of $1000 and an award certificate. The recipient should be a young scientist (graduate student or postdoctoral fellow) who has been first author or co-first author of a paper that appeared in JSB in the preceding three years or who had that status (graduate student or fellow) at the time the published work was done. Nominations can be made by any reader. A nomination, not exceeding 300 words, should consist of a statement of the particular merit of the paper and should be sent by e-mail to jsb@elsevier.com. The cutoff date for nominations in any year is 31 December. An unsuccessful nomination will remain eligible in the following years, subject to the three-year limitation.
Form of manuscript. To expedite the reviewing process, our preferred form of submission is a PDF file including all table and figures. In addition, one hard copy including original figures should be sent to the editorial office. If you are not able to include an electronic version of your manuscript, please send four copies of the manuscript (three with original art). Manuscripts should be written in clear, concise, and grammatical English. They should be typed double-spaced on one side only of 8 1/2 11-inch or A4 white bond paper with 1-inch (25-mm) margins on all sides. Manuscripts should be submitted in complete and final form for publication.
Title page. The title page (page 1) should contain the article title, author(s) name(s) and affiliation(s), and the name, complete mailing address, and telephone and fax numbers of the person to whom correspondence should be sent. Abstract. The abstract (page 2) should be a single paragraph not exceeding 200 words. It should be a synopsis of the work reported-including materials, methods, and results-and should be comprehensible to readers before they have read the paper. Abbreviations and reference citations should be avoided. Keywords. Keywords should be listed immediately after the abstract. Abbreviations should be restricted to SI symbols and those recommended by the IUPAC. Abbreviations should be defined in parentheses after their first mention in the text. Standard units of measurements and chemical symbols of elements may be used without definition in the body of the paper. Acknowledgments should be included at the end of the text and not in footnotes. Personal acknowledgments should precede those of institutions and agencies. Footnotes should be avoided, but if they must be used they should be numbered consecutively and placed (double-spaced) on a separate page at the end of the manuscript.
References should be arranged in alphabetical order according to the first author's surname and typed double-spaced on a separate page at the end of the manuscript. They should be referred to in the text by the authors' surnames and the date of publication, e.g., Doe and Jones (1990), Jones et al. (1991), or (Doe, 1990; Jones, 1991). Abbreviations of journal titles should follow Chemical Abstracts Service Source Index. Please note the following examples:
Matthews, R.E.F., 1991. Plant Virology, 3rd ed. Academic Press, San Diego.
Veselsk¨¢, R., Janisch, R., 2001. Reaction of the skin fibroblast cytoskeleton to micromanipulation interventions. J. Struct. Biol. 136, 110-118.
Villiger, W., 1990. Lowicryl resins, in: Hayat, M.A. (Ed.), Colloidal Gold: Principles, Methods, and Applications, Academic Press, San Diego, Vol. 3, pp. 59-71.
Figures. Your initial submission should be in PDF format, with the figures included as part of the file. At the revision or acceptance stage, please submit a single TIFF or EPS file containing all figures. No other file type will yield good results. TIFF art should comply with the following settings: halftones (color/grayscale): 300 dpi; line art (black and white), and mixed images (halftones with text or line art: 600-1200 dpi. If it is necessary to import graphics from a vector-based drawing program (e.g., Adobe Illustrator) into a raster-based program (e.g., Adobe Photoshop) in order to produce a TIFF file, a resolution of at least 600 dpi is required for high-quality reproduction.
When creating your figures, use font sizes and line weights that will reproduce clearly and accurately when figures are sized to the appropriate column width. The minimum line weight is ? point. Thinner lines well not reproduce well. Eliminate all excess white space from the borders of each figure. Do not include figure legends or other extraneous text in a graphic file. Figure legends should be provided as text, placed after the reference section in the main manuscript file. Number figures consecutively with Arabic numerals.
At least one set of figures in camera-ready form must be submitted. Do not label the figures with figure numbers. Indicate the number of the picture on the back. It is important to remember that all figures will be printed as received. Therefore, ideally the figures should be prepared at the same size as they are to appear in print. At least one set of figures must be the original montages, not reproductions.
All figures, whether photographs, graphs, diagrams, or drawings, should be grouped into plates and identified with a, b, c,...(e.g., Fig. 1a, Fig. 1b, Fig. 1c, . . .). Plates may be half- or full-page width. The dimensions of the printed page should be kept in mind when preparing the figures for publication. The width of full-page-width figures on the mounted plates should be <177 mm or 7 in., and that of half-page-width figures <84 mm or 3 5/16 in. The height can be varied up to a maximum of 240 mm or 9 7/16 in.
Stereoscopic pairs should be submitted properly mounted with a stereobase of 60-65 mm; i.e., each half-picture must be 60-65 mm wide and properly cropped for optimum stereoviewing. The stereopairs should be mounted without space between them. They will be printed at the same magnification. Lettering on drawings should be professional quality or generated by high-resolution computer graphics and must be large enough to withstand appropriate reduction for publication.
Illustrations on disk. Figures should be submitted both on disk and in hard copy. Complete TIFF files should be supplied.
Color figures. Two color plates will be published free of charge in each article. Additional color plates in the same article will be charged to the author. Authors are encouraged to prepare color figures such that multiple figures may be consolidated on a single plate. To minimize the costs to the author, multiple color figures may appear out of numerical sequence. Please submit high-resolution color figures in CMYK format.
Tables. Tables should be typed double-spaced on a separate sheet and numbered with Arabic numerals. Each table must have a short descriptive heading typed double-spaced over the table. Footnotes to tables should be identified by superscript lowercase letters and typed below the table. Tables should be planned to fit the proportions of the printed page.
Proofs. Proofs will be sent as PDF files to the author, with a reprint order form. Note that due to e-mail file size restrictions your figures will appear at a lower resolution than the final product. Authors will be charged for alterations in excess of 10% of the cost of composition.
Table A
Structure Reports
Structure Reports should include the following information (some of which have example values preceded by a colon) which may be presented in tabular form:
The PDB accession code for the structure.
Source of protein The source of the original gene sequence and any coding identification. Whether it is full length or a fragment(s). Number of chains and their molecular weights. If it is a fragment of a gene, how the boundaries were determined, and its relationship to the entire protein. The organism in which the protein was expressed and the vector and/or promoter and resistance markers sufficient to allow another to repeat.
Crystal Space group Unit cell dimensions and angles
Resolution 1.75 Å
Refinement Program : CNS 1.1 Refinement target : ENGH & HUBER
Data used in refinement. Resolution range high (Å) : 1.75 Resolution range low (Å) : 29.46 Data cutoff ( (F)) : 0.000 Outlier cutoff high (RMS(ABS(F))) : Null Completeness (working+test) (%) : 98.6 Number of reflections : 59490
Fit to data used in refinement Cross-validation method : Throughout Free R value test set selection : Random R value (working set) : 0.197 Free R value : 0.221 Free R value test set size (%) : 5.100 Free R value test set count : 3007 Estimated error of free R value : 0.004
Fit in the highest resolution bin Total number of bins used : 6 Bin resolution range high (Å) : 1.75 Bin resolution range low (Å) : 1.86 Bin completeness (working+test) (%) : 92.40 Reflections in bin (working set) : 8758 Bin R value (working set) : 0.3450 Bin free R value : 0.3750 Bin free R value test set size (%) : 5.10 Bin free R value test set count : 467 Estimated error of bin free R value : 0.017
Number of non-hydrogen atoms used in refinement Protein atoms : 4306 Nucleic acid atoms : 0 Heterogen atoms : 132 Solvent atoms : 367
B values From Wilson Plot (Å2) : 25.90 Mean B value (overall, Å2) : 27.30
Rms deviations from ideal values Bond lengths (Å) : 0.007 Bond angles ( ) : 1.50 Dihedral angles ( ) : 24.10 Improper angles ( ) : 0.90
Isotropic thermal model : Restrained
Isotropic thermal factor restraints RMS SIGMA Main-chain bond (Å2) : Null ; Null Main-chain angle (Å2) : Null ; Null Side-chain bond (Å2) : Null ; Null Side-chain angle (Å2) : Null ; Null
Bulk solvent modeling Method used : Flat Model KSOL : 0.38 BSOL : 43.37
NCS model : Null
NCS restraints RMS SIGMA/WEIGHT Group 1 positional (Å) : Null ; Null Group 1 B factor (Å2) : Null ; Null
Temperature (Kelvin) : 100.0 pH : 8.60 Number of crystals used : 1
Synchrotron (Y/N) : N Radiation source : Rotating anode Beamline : Null X-ray generator model : Rigaku Monochromatic or laue (M/L) : M Wavelenth or range (Å) : 1.5418 Monochromator : Osmic mirrors Optics : Osmic mirrors
Detector type : Image plate Detector manufacturer : Rigaku Raxis IV Intensity-integration software : Denzo Data scaling software : Scalepack
Number of unique reflections : 59657 Resolution range high (Å) : 1.750 Resolution range low (Å) : 29.460 Rejection criteria ( (I)) : -3.000
Overall Completeness for range (%) : 98.6 Data redundancy : Null Rmerge (I) : Null Rsym (I) : Null I/ (I) for the data set : Null
In the highest resolution shell Highest resolution shell, range high (Å) : 1.75 Highest resolution shell, range low (Å) : 1.81 Completeness for shell (%) : 88.1 Data redundancy in shell : Null Rmerge for shell (I) : Null Rsym for shell (I) : Null I/ (I) for shell : Null Diffraction protocol: Single wavelength Method used to determine the structure: Molecular replacement
|
Guide to Online Submission
|
|
|
Welcome to the Elsevier online submission service. This service has been designed to be as easy as possible to use. Authors can upload their article as a LaTeX, Microsoft® (MS) Word® or WordPerfect®. It is also possible to submit an article in PostScript or Adobe® Acrobat® PDF format, but if the article is accepted it will be necessary to send in the original source files.
The system generates an Adobe Acrobat PDF version of the article which is used for the reviewing process. Authors, Reviewers and Editors send and receive all correspondence by e-mail and no paper correspondence is necessary. Note: articles are converted into PDF for the review process but may be edited after acceptance to follow journal standards.
Click here for a walkthrough of the online submission process
Journal specific guidelines on types of article accepted and how to prepare your article can be found in the Author Gateway journal page, in the Guide for Authors.
Word Processor Formats Please submit your article as a file in one of the following formats:
- MS Word 6
- MS Word 97
- MS Word 98 for Macintosh®
- MS Word 2000
- WordPerfect 6.1 or higher
- RTF
Important notes on word processor file preparation
- For review purposes you must submit your article as a SINGLE FILE. You need to embed all your figures and tables within this file.
- Fonts: Please choose Times, Times New Roman, Courier, Arial or Helvetica fonts as much as possible. Other fonts (e.g. Chinese, Japanese and Korean (CJK) character fonts) may cause the PDF conversion to fail. If your manuscript does not correctly convert to PDF, replace the font(s) where necessary and try again.
- Most formatting codes will be removed or replaced on processing your article so there is no need for you to apply excessive layout styling. In addition, avoid options such as automatic word breaking, justified layout, double columns, automatic paragraph numbering (especially for numbered references). However, do use bold face, italic, subscripts, superscripts, etc.
- For the production of your article you will also have to submit your graphic files separately as high resolution graphics. (See also the section on Electronic Artwork below.)
LaTex For general instructions on how to prepare an article using LaTeX, see the Latex file guidelines. In addition, please note the following:
- Include all your graphics in the LaTeX file, e.g. with the \includegraphics from the graphics package.
- Submit any special class (or style) files and other macro files with your article. We are using an up-to-date TeX installation (TeXLive5d), so you need not include any of the standard packages.
PDF If possible, please submit the original LaTeX or word processor files: this website will take care of converting them into a PDF file.
If you wish to create your own PDF, download the ES_review.joboptions to the "Settings" folder of your Acrobat Distiller and choose the "ES_review" joboptions before converting your file.
Note: This joboptions file is for Adobe Distiller v4.05 and later. If you are still working with an older version, or if you need more help, see. PDF settings .
File naming To avoid confusion, please make sure your file has a short, descriptive name. Short means less than 30 characters and descriptive means names like figure1.tif and smith-article-version1.doc.
For the production of your paper in the journal we need high-resolution graphic files in either TIFF or EPS. For information on how to prepare your artwork for electronic submission, see http://authors.elsevier.com/artwork.
1. Find the journal on the Author Gateway by searching or browsing
2. Read the 'Guide for Authors' for specific instructions on submitting a paper to that journal
3. Click on the 'online submisssion' link in the right hand journal services box
4. Log in if you are already a registered user (if you are not already a registered user you need to 'create a profile' by submitting your contact details and choosing a username/password combination). This creates a completely secure environment to send your paper to us online.
5. Once you are logged in you are taken to the Journal's submission page where you choose to 'Submit New Paper'. You are taken through the following steps:
i. Enter data related to your manuscript (Title, Authors, Keywords etc.)
ii. Choose the accepting Editor. (if the Journal has more than one Editor, you will find a drop-down list with the names of all the Editors of this Journal to whom you may submit your article. The journal Guide for Authors will give you more information on how to decide which Editor to choose)
iii. Upload your manuscript file(s). See the section on File Formats for more information.
iv. The website creates a PDF from your source file(s). You must check this PDF as it will be sent to the reviewers. If the PDF is not OK edit and resubmit your source file(s) or contacts author support for advice - PDF/PostScript source can be submitted as well as LaTeX/Word Processor files.
v. Upload your figures separately for the production process and select how you want your figures to appear in print (colour or black and white). If the figures are too large (>5 Mb) you may send manually direct to the editor.
vi. Check your submission details are correct and press submit to send your files to the journal editor
6. You will receive an acknowledgement email to say the paper is under review
7. Until the review process is completed you will not be able to update your submission from the website. If you have made a mistake you must contact the editor.
If revision is required:
1. You will receive an email from the editor
2. You can revise your paper by using the link in the email which takes you back to the online submission service (when revising your paper all the previous information is retained - no retyping is needed but it can be updated and new files attached). Alternatively you can access the paper directly from the Journal's online submission page or from 'my home' on the Author Gateway.
3. Make any changes necessary and add or remove figures/other files
4. A revised PDF is created which is sent to the editor at the end of the process and you receive an acknowledgement email
5. Once your new version is submitted you will not be able to make any further revisions from the website
After submission For information on the status of your article, please contact the Editor to whom you submitted your article. There is an email link to the editor in the journal's online submission service or on 'my home' in the Author Gateway.
You will receive an email containing the final decision of the Editor, containing editorial comments.
Once your paper has been accepted you can track its progress from your home page on the Author Gateway. It will automatically move from the 'Online Submissions' section of 'my home' to 'Accepted Papers'. From here you can view the progress of your paper through the production process to the final published article. We will also email you with the major milestones, including a direct link to your article when it appears on ScienceDirect. For more information on tracking go to Getting Published with Elsevier.
If you have any comments about this document, or any difficulties using this electronic submission site, please contact Author Support at Elsevier. |
|
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief:
A.C. Steven, Laboratory of Structural Biology, National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Maryland, USA
Associate Editor for Europe:
W. Baumeister, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Biochemie, Martinsried bei M¨¹nchen, Germany
Editorial Board:
U. Aebi, Maurice-M¨¹ller Institut, Biozentrum, University of Basel, Switzerland B. Afzelius, Wenner Gren Institute, University of Stockholm, Sweden L. Amos, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom T.S. Baker, Department of Biological Sciences, Lilly Hall of Life Sciences, Purdue University, Indiana, USA W. Baumeister, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Biochemie, Martinsried bei M¨¹nchen, Germany P. Bjorkman, California Institute of Tehcnology, California, USA A. Brisson, IECB University of Bordeaux, France B. Carragher, Beckman Visualization Facility, University of Illinois, USA J.L. Carrascosa, Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia CSIC, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain W. Chiu, Verna & Marrs McLean, Department of Biochemistry, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, USA A. Engel, M.E. M¨¹ller-Institut, Biozentrum, University of Basil, Switzerland J. Frank, Wadsworth Center for Laboratories and Research, New York, USA B. Geiger, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel R.M. Glaeser, Donner Laboratories, University of California at Berkeley, California, USA R.S. Goody, Abteilung Physikalische Biochemie, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Molekulare Physiologie, Dortmund, Germany H. Hansma, Department of Physics, University of California at Santa Barbara, California, USA A. Joachimiak, Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois, USA J.E. Johnson, Scripps Reserach Institute, California, USA D.A. Kirschner, Department of Biology, Boston College, Massachusetts, USA J. Kistler, Cell Biology Department, University of Auckland, New Zealand W.J. Landis, Northeastern Universities College of Medicine, Ohio, USA K.R. Leonard, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany A. Lupas, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Entwicklungsbiologie, Tuebingen, Germany E. Mandelkow, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Structrual Molecular Biology, Hamburg, Germany A. McPherson, Department of Biochemistry, University of California at Riverside, California, USA R.A. Milligan, Department of Molecular Biology, Research Institute of Scripps Clinic, California, USA A.G. Murzin, Centre for Protein Engineering, United Kingdom K. Namba, Protonic NanoMachine Project, ERATO, JST & Graduate School of Frontier, Osaka University, Kyoto, Japan E. Nogales, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley, California, USA D.A.D. Parry, Department of Physics, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand T. Pederson, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Massachusetts, USA R.N. Perham, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom M. Radermacher, University of Vermont, USA S.E. Radford, University of Leeds, United Kingdom I. Raska, Institute of Experimental Medicine, academy of Sciences of Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic H. Saibil, Crystallography Department, Birbeck College, London, United Kingdom D.L. Spector, Cold Spring Harbor Lab, New York, USA J.M. Squire, Biophysics Section, Teh Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, United Kingdom H. Stark, Max Planck Institut f¨¹r Biophysikalische Chemie, Goettingen, Germany M. Stewart, Department of Structural Studies, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom R. Stroud, University of California at San Francisco, California, USA S.-F. Sui, Department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Tsinghua University, Beijing, People's Republic of China L. Tamm, Department of Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics, University of Virginia, USA K.A. Taylor, Duke University Medical Center, North Carolina, USA P.A. Tucker, Structural Biology Programme, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany R. van Driel, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands A. Verkleij, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands T. Wakabayashi, Physics Department, School of Science, University of Tokyo, Japan S. Weiner, Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel B. Weis, Stanford University School of Medicine, California, USA P. Wingfield, NIH, Maryland, USA
Founding Editor:
F.S. Sjöstrand
Submission of manuscripts. Manuscripts may be submitted directly to either editor, Dr. Alasdair C. Steven or Dr. Wolfgang Baumeister. We prefer that your initial submission be a PDF submitted electronically. Dr. Alasdair C. Steven c/o Journal of Structural Biology Editorial Office, 525 B Street, Suite 1900 San Diego, CA 92101-4495, USA Phone: 619-699-6324 Fax: 619-699-6700 E-mail: jsb@elsevier.com
Dr. Wolfgang Baumeister Max-Planck-Institut fur Biochemie Am Klopferspitz 18a D-82152 Martinsried bei Munich, Germany Phone: 49-89-8578-2642 Fax: 49-89-8578-2641 E-mail: jsb@elsevier.com
|