Gene Regulation and Systems Biology
Synopsis: An open access, peer reviewed electronic journal that covers regulation of genes and proteins they encode and the broader field of systems biology.
Indexing: Pubmed, Pubmed Central, Embase, Embiology, Google Scholar, CAS, DOAJ, Intute, OAIster
Processing time: Decision in 2 weeks for 90% of papers
Latest news:
Gene Regulation and Systems Biology call for papers from Dr James Willey
On behalf of the Editorial Board I invite you to submit your next article to Gene Regulation and Systems Biology, an open access electronic journal published by Libertas Academica. The journal specializes in providing wide and open access to high quality manuscripts reporting on regulation of genes and the proteins they encode and the relationship between gene regulation and the wider field of systems biology.
We accept original studies and thoughtful reviews, surveys, opinions, commentaries, techniques, and essays. All submitted articles will be considered and peer-reviewed.
We provide an efficient, constructive peer review of manuscripts, with an editorial decision in less than 2 weeks for 90% of the papers submitted. Since the journal is open access, dissemination of the work is rapid and is available to anyone with an internet connection, leading to wide exposure for your published article.
We look forward to receiving your manuscript.
What is the advantage to you of publishing in Gene Regulation and Systems Biology?
- Full open access: everyone can read your article and you retain copyright in it
- Publishing decision within 2 weeks of submission
- Your paper will not be rejected due to lack of space and will be published immediately on acceptance
- Prompt and fair peer review from two expert peer reviewers
- Frequent updates on your paper’s status
- Friendly responsive staff
"The communication between your staff and me has been terrific. Whenever progress is made with the manuscript, I receive notice. Quite honestly, I've never had such complete communication with a journal."
In summary:
The advantages of a younger journal such as Gene Regulation and Systems Biology are numerous but in essence allow us a greater flexibility and responsiveness to authors and readers that older journals cannot match.
Yours sincerely,
Dr James C. Willey
Editor-in-Chief
Gene Regulation and Systems Biology
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