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DNA RESEARCH《DNA研究》 (官网投稿)

简介
  • 期刊简称DNA RES
  • 参考译名《DNA研究》
  • 核心类别 SCIE(2023版), 外文期刊,
  • IF影响因子
  • 自引率1.80%
  • 主要研究方向生物学-GENETICS & HEREDITY 遗传学

主要研究方向:

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生物学-GENETICS & HEREDITY 遗传学

DNA RESEARCH《DNA研究》(双月刊). DNA Research is an internationally peer-reviewed journal which aims at publishing papers of highest quality i...[显示全部]
征稿信息

万维提示:

1、投稿方式:在线投稿。

2、期刊网址:https://academic.oup.com/dnaresearch

3、投稿网址:http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/dnar

4、官网邮箱:tabata@kazusa.or.jp(主编)

更多编辑邮箱如下。

5、期刊刊期:双月刊,逢双月出版。

2021429日星期四

                        

 

期刊邮箱【官网信息】

 

Editorial Board

Editor-In-Chief

Satoshi Tabata

tabata@kazusa.or.jp

Structural and functional analysis of the genomes of plants and plant-related microbes

 

Executive Editor

Katsumi Isono

kisono@kazusa.or.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of prokaryotes and lower eukaryotes: (2) Evolution of organisms based on genomic data

 

Senior Editors

Takashi Ito

tito@med.kyushu-u.ac.jp

 (1) Yeast functional genomics: (2) Epigenomics: (3) Genome technologies

 

Osamu Ohara

ohara@kazusa.or.jp

 (1) Transcriptomic and proteomic analysis of mammals: (2) Development of technology in genomic analyses

 

Kazuhiro Sato

kazsato@rib.okayama-u.ac.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of plants: (2) Application of genomic information of plants

 

Editors

Doil Choi

doil@snu.ac.kr

 (1) Molecular analysis of plant defense systems and plant-microbe interactions: (2) Plant genetics and genomics

 

Masahira Hattori

hattori@edu.k.u-tokyo.ac.jp

 (1) Metagenomic analysis of microbiomes and development of methodology: (2) Microbial genetics and genomics

 

Tetsuya Hayashi

thayash@bact.med.kyushu-u.ac.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of microorganisms and their viruses: (2) Evolution of microorganisms based on genomic data

 

Sachiko N. Isobe

sisobe@kazusa.or.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of plant species: (2) Molecular breeding of plants

 

Minoru S. H. Ko

kom@z7.keio.jp

 (1) Systematic experimental analysis of stem cells: (2) Computational and mathematical analysis of large data sets of genomics, epigenomics, and phenotypes

 

Yuji Kohara

ykohara@nig.ac.jp

 (1) Structure, expression and function of the genomes of nematodes and related organisms: (2) Search for and characterization of useful genomic resources

 

Da Luo

dluo@sibs.ac.cn

Genomic and physiological analysis of plant development and cellular differentiation

 

Kenta Nakai

knakai@ims.u-tokyo.ac.jp

 (1) Bioinformatic analysis of various aspects of NGS data: (2) Computational biology and medical genomics

 

Katsuhisa Ozaki

ozaki@brh.co.jp

 (1) Genomic, transcriptomic, and neuro-behavioral analysis of plant-insect interactions and evolution

 

Shusei Sato

shuseis@ige.tohoku.ac.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of plants and plant-related microbes: (2) Plant-microbe interactions

 

Kazuki Saito

kazuki.saito@riken.jp

Functional genomics and metabolomics of biologically important plants

 

Takao Sekiya

sekiya@po.kyoundo.jp

Genomic analysis and development of methodology for cancer research

 

Toshihiko Shiroishi

toshihiko.shiroishi@riken.jp

 (1) Genetic and genomic analysis of mammals: (2) Functional analysis of regulatory sequences

 

Mikita Suyama

mikita@bioreg.kyushu-u.ac.jp

 (1) Comparative genome analysis of mammals: (2) Bioinformatics and computational biology

 

Hiroyuki Toh

tohhir@kwansei.ac.jp

 (1) Molecular evolution and bioinformatic analysis of proteins: (2) Protein engineering and systems biology

 

Shoji Tsuji

tsuji@m.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Molecular genetic and neurogenomic analysis of human diseases

 

Masahiro Yano

myano@affrc.go.jp

 (1) Genome-wide association mapping of QTLs: (2) Map-based cloning and marker-assisted selection of crop plants

 

Former Editors-In-Chief (1994-2020)

Mituru Takanami

m.takanami@nifty.ne.jp

 

Michio Oishi

dnar-eic@kazusa.or.jp

 

投稿须知【官网信息】

 

Information for Authors

Aims and Scope

DNA Research publishes research papers with original findings of substantial importance in broad aspects of DNA and genome-related research. Emphasis will be made on the following subjects: 1) Sequencing and characterization of genomes/important genomic regions, 2) Functional analysis of genes, gene families and genomes, 3) Techniques, equipment, and software useful for structural and functional analysis of genes and genomes, 4) Comprehensive analysis of the structure and function of genes and genomes as well as relevant informatics methods and tools. The journal also welcomes novel findings in other scientific disciplines related to genomes.

Article Types

DNA Research publishes three types of articles.

Research Article: Articles presenting novel findings of biological significance that advance the current knowledge in a specific research field and attract a broad interest of readers.

Resource Article: Genomes Explored a): Articles concisely reporting the results of analysis of genomes, transcriptomes and related aspects of diverse organisms to be considered useful as genomic resources.

Review b): Articles providing an overview in a constructive and provocative manner of a specific field or topic that has been significantly developed in recent years.

a) This article type has been introduced in 2020 to provide a useful genomic resource for scientists. Manuscripts should concisely report the results of analysis of genomes, transcriptomes and related aspects of diverse organisms.

b) Review articles are published on an invitation-basis only. If you are interested in writing a review article on a topic of your expertise, please express your wish to Editor-in-Chief (dnar-eic@kazusa.or.jp) in advance.

Manuscript Preparation: Basic Instructions

Manuscripts are limited to 10 typeset pages in principle (approximately 7,000 words or 30 manuscript pages), but supporting data may be presented as supplementary data, if accepted. Authors are expected to follow the journal’s basic manuscript structure and formatting requirements. Papers which do not comply may be unsubmitted by the Editorial Office and a request sent to the corresponding author to resubmit the manuscript with the necessary additions or amendments.

Manuscripts should be structured to include the following sections: (1) title page, (2) abstract (no more than 200 words), (3) introduction, (4) materials and methods, (5) results and discussion, (6) references, (7) tables, and (8) figure legends. The title page, abstract, references, tables (each table), and figure legends must begin on a new page.

Cover letter: Authors are required to submit a cover letter which should briefly state the originality, significance and advancement made by the work in the relevant field, and confirm that the criteria for authorship described in the ‘Authorship’ section below are fulfilled.

Detailed instructions on preparing manuscripts for submission can be found below.

Online Submission: Basic Instructions

Submissions should be made through the online submission system.

As your manuscript will be subjected to critical evaluation by editors and peer reviewers, we would like to ask you to pay attention to the following points: in addition to making the manuscript clear and concise, please avoid large-sized and/or complicated figures/tables wherever possible. This is to aid readers in understanding the article and to help ensure that the file size of the manuscript PDF including figures/tables does not become too large.

Please provide figures/ tables to which their number and caption are clearly indicated along with appropriate footnote/figure legend so that they can be easily evaluated by reviewers. You should provide table footnotes/figure legends in the main text as well. These precautions will enhance the speed of peer-reviewing process.

Detailed instructions on submitting manuscript files can be found below.

Review Process

All manuscripts are peer-reviewed by qualified reviewers and edited by one of the editorial board members. Authors are notified, generally within 6 weeks after submission, of the editor’s decision. When a manuscript is returned to the author for  amendment, it should be returned to the editor within 3 months, otherwise it may be considered withdrawn.

Publication

DNA Research aims to publish authors’ accepted manuscripts on our Advance articles page within 24 hours of receipt at OUP. In order to do this, it is imperative that authors sign their licence agreements immediately.

Manuscripts are then copyedited, typeset, proofed out, and corrected. Once the manuscripts are finalised, the uncorrected manuscripts are taken off the Advance Access page and replaced with the final corrected articles.

Open Access Charges

DNA Research is a fully open access journal, and all articles are published in the journal under an open access license immediately upon publication. You will need to pay an open access charge to publish under an open access license.

Details of the open access licenses and open access charges.

CC BY, CC BY-NC licence - £700 / $1250 / €875

If the corresponding author is based in one of the countries included in our Developing Countries Initiative, your article will be eligible for a full waiver of the open access charge.

OUP has a growing number of Read and Publish agreements with institutions and consortia which provide funding for open access publishing. This means authors from participating institutions can publish their papers under an open access license, and the institution may pay the charge. Find out if your institution is participating in one of OUP’s Read and Publish agreements.

Authors publishing in DNA Research can use the following Creative Commons licenses for their articles:

Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY)

Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial license (CC BY-NC)

Where applicable, authors should follow institutional or funder requirements when selecting their publishing license. Information on the differences between Creative Commons licenses can be found on the Creative Commons website.

Ethics

When reporting animal experiments, authors should indicate whether the institution’s, national research council’s, or any other law on the care and use of laboratory animals was followed. When reporting on human subjects, authors should indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the Helsinki Declaration (1964, amended most recently in 2008) of the World Medical Association. Manuscripts should include a statement that the patient’s written consent was obtained and any information, including illustrations, should be as anonymized as far as possible. Authors should indicate that the design of the work has been approved by local ethical committees or that it conforms to standards currently applied in the country of origin. The name of the authorizing body and the authorization number of the study should be stated in the paper.

When preparing your manuscript, we recommend referring to the ARRIVE guidelines.

Misconduct

Misconduct on submitted manuscripts is taken seriously and will lead to immediate rejection. This includes dual-submission, plagiarism (including self-plagiarism or salami-slicing publication), figure manipulation, duplicate publication and fraudulent data. If authors are not using original material, they must obtain the relevant permission(s) to reproduce any copyright material and acknowledge the original source in their manuscript.

If misconduct is discovered after a manuscript is accepted, the article will be retracted and a note to announce retraction will be published. Any possible case of misconduct will be dealt with and if it cannot be resolved by discussion with the authors, the case may be reported to the appropriate authorities. If, during the course of reviewing an article, an editor is alerted to possible problems such as fraudulent data in another publication, the Editor-in-Chief may contact the journal in which the previous publication appeared to raise the concern.

DNA Research is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and investigates all potential cases of misconduct thoroughly on a case-by-case basis. Cases of research or publication misconduct may be referred to COPE in an anonymised format.

Submission of Manuscripts

Manuscript Preparation: Detailed Instructions

Manuscripts are limited to 10 typeset pages in principle (approximately 7,000 words or 30 manuscript pages), but supporting data may be presented as supplementary data, if accepted. Authors are expected to follow the journal’s basic manuscript structure and formatting requirements. Papers which do not comply may be unsubmitted by the Editorial Office and a request sent to the corresponding author to resubmit the manuscript with the necessary additions or amendments.

Manuscripts should be structured to include the following sections: (1) title page, (2) abstract (no more than 200 words), (3) introduction, (4) materials and methods, (5) results and discussion, (6) references, (7) tables, and (8) figure legends. The title page, abstract, references, tables (each table), and figure legends must begin on a new page.

Cover letter:

Authors are required to submit a cover letter which should briefly state the originality, significance and advancement made by the work in the relevant field, and confirm that the criteria for authorship described in the ‘Authorship’ section below are fulfilled.

Preprint policy:

Authors retain the right to make an Author’s Original Version (preprint) available through various channels, and this does not prevent submission to the journal. For further information see our Online Licensing, Copyright and Permissions policies. If accepted, the authors are required to update the status of any preprint, including their published paper’s DOI, as described on our Author Self-Archiving policy page. If a preprint version is published online, authors are requested to state this fact in the cover letter at initial submission stage.

File Format:

Follow the instructions below regarding the format of your manuscript and references. Prepare the main text with Microsoft Word and add line numbers for convenience in the review process. Please also use 1.5 line spacing. We recommend using the Times New Roman font, in size 10.5. If you have any questions regarding this, please contact the Editorial Office at dnar.editorialoffice@oup.com.

Title page:

The title page must contain a brief title which accurately describes the contents, and a running title of no more than 50 characters (including spaces). The names of all authors should be provided along with the full name and address of each institution. The name, complete address, and telephone and fax numbers should be provided for the author to whom correspondence should be addressed.

Abstract and key words:

The abstract should be one paragraph of no more than 200 words summarizing the basic content of the paper. Avoid abbreviations and references. When it is essential to include a reference, a full literature citation except for the article title should be provided. After the abstract, between 3 and 5 key words should be included that will assist in cross indexing.

Introduction:

State the reasons for performing the work with brief reference to relevant previous work (no longer than one type-written page).

Materials and Methods:

Describe the materials and methods used to allow the experiments to be reproduced. Describe only the methods specifically used in detail. For commonly used methods, citation of references is sufficient.

Results and Discussion:

This section may be divided into subsections with short subtitles. The conclusions are to be provided in this section.

Acknowledgements:

Include here the names of those to be acknowledged as well as all sources of financial support.

References:

The references should be cited in the text in the order in which they first appear using superscript arabic numbers. List all authors when there are 6 or less; when 7 or more, list only the first 3 authors followed by "et al." Abbreviations of journals must conform to those used in the NLM Catalogue. The reference section should be arranged as follows:

1. Sprengel, R., Braun, T., Nikolics, K., Segaloff, D. L., and Seeburg, P. H. 1990, The testicular receptor for follicle cDNA stimulating hormone-Structure and functional expression of cloned cDNA, Mol. Endocrinol., 4, 525-530.

2. Sambrook, J., Frietsch, E. F., and Maniatis, T. 1989, Molecular cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York.

3. Maxam, A. M. and Gilbert, W. 1980, In: Grossman, L., Moldave, K. (eds) Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 65. Academic Press, New York, pp. 499-559.

If you use EndNote and/or Reference Manager to facilitate referencing citations (not required for submission), this journal's style is available for use.

Tables:

Type each table on a separate page with a heading at the top and footnotes at the bottom. All acronyms and abbreviations must be defined.

Figures:

To avoid wasted white space and clutter, please ensure that the figure is reasonably sized and laid out. Line drawings must be clear, with high black and white contrast. TIFF files are preferable. Figures should be created in the same size you wish them to appear, and at the following resolution:

Line Drawings: higher than 1200 dpi

Half Tones: higher than 300 dpi

Single column figures should be less than 85mm wide. Double column figures should be less than 170 mm wide. Appropriately sized numbers, letters and symbols should be used, no smaller than 2 mm in size. If you are submitting figures in ppt format, please include the figure number and caption within the ppt file. For useful information on preparing your figures for publication, go to Cadmus Digital Art.

Figure legends:

Figure legends should bear enough information to understand the figure without reference to the text.

Third-Party Content in Open Access papers:

If your paper contains material for which you do not have Open Access re-use permissions, please state this clearly by supplying the following credit line alongside the material:

Title of content

Author, Original publication, year of original publication, by permission of [rights holder]

This image/content is not covered by the terms of the Creative Commons licence of this publication. For permission to reuse, please contact the rights holder.

Data:

Where ethically feasible, DNA Research strongly encourages authors to make all data on which the conclusions of the paper rely available to readers. We suggest that data be presented in the main manuscript or additional supporting files, or deposited in a public repository whenever possible. Information on general repositories for all data types, and a list of recommended repositories by subject area, is available on the Research Data Policy page.

Data Citation:

DNA Research supports the Force 11 Data Citation Principles and requires that all publicly available datasets be fully referred to in the reference list with an accession number or unique identifier such as a digital object identifier (DOI). Data citations should include the minimum information recommended by DataCite:

[dataset]* Authors, Year, Title, Publisher (repository or archive name), Identifier

*The inclusion of the [dataset] tag at the beginning of the citation helps us to correctly identify and tag the citation. This tag will be removed from the citation published in the reference list.

Presentation of sequence data:

DDBJ, EMBL or GenBank accession numbers for nucleotide and/or amino acid sequence data must be included in the manuscript. In order to designate exons and introns, coding regions, transcribed regions etc., uppercase and lowercase letters may be used. Encoded amino acid sequences may be presented, using single-letter amino acid codes.

Supplementary data:

Additional sequence or mapping data that provide supporting evidence to a paper can be published separately as online-only material. The materials to be included in this section should be provided in their final form and should include a brief description that provides enough information to the data. When references are included, a full citation should be provided. Please note that Supplementary data will not be edited, so ensure that it is clearly and succinctly presented, and that the style of terms conforms to the rest of the paper. Also ensure that the presentation will work on any internet browser.

Abbreviations and symbols:

All abbreviations used in the text, except for those listed in this document, should be defined at their first mention in the text. Use single-letter or three-letter codes to designate symbols for amino acids.

Authorship:

All persons designated as authors should qualify for authorship. The order of authorship should be a joint decision of the co-authors. Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for the content. Authorship credit should be based on substantial contribution to conception and design, execution, or analysis and interpretation of data. All authors should be involved in drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content, and must have read and approved the final version of the manuscript. Assurance that all authors of the paper have fulfilled these criteria for authorship should be clearly stated in the cover letter.

Language editing:

If English is not your first language, you may wish to have your manuscript edited for language before submitting it. This is not a mandatory step, but may help to ensure that the academic content of your paper is fully understood by journal editors and reviewers. Language editing does not guarantee that your manuscript will be accepted for publication. There are many specialist language editing services available and you can find these easily by searching online. Authors are liable for all costs associated with such services. Please note that edited manuscripts will still need to undergo peer-review by the journal.

Crossref Funding Data Registry:

In order to meet your funding requirements authors are required to name their funding sources, or state if there are none, during the submission process. For further information on this process or to find out more about CHORUS, visit the CHORUS initiative.

Online Submission: Detailed Instructions

DNA Research only accepts submissions via its online submission system.

1.    Follow the instructions above regarding the format of your manuscript and references.

2.    Prepare your manuscript, including tables, and save it as a .doc, .docx, .rtf or .ps file. All files in these formats will be converted to .pdf format upon submission. Prepare your figures at publication quality resolution, using applications capable of generating high-resolution .tif files (1200 d.p.i. for line drawings and 300 d.p.i. for colour and half-tone artwork). For useful information on preparing your figures for publication, go to Cadmus Digital Art.

3.    Any supplementary data to be submitted for review may be uploaded as Microsoft Excel spreadsheets or other appropriate file types. These will not be converted to PDF upon submission.

4.    When naming your files, please use simple filenames and avoid special characters and spaces. If you are using a Mac, you must also type the three-letter extension at the end of the file name you choose (e.g. .doc, .rtf, .jpg, .gif, .tif, .ppt, .xls, .pdf, .eps, .mov).

5.    The online submission software will automatically create a single .pdf file containing your main text and reduced-resolution versions of any figures you have submitted. This document will be used when your manuscript undergoes peer review. Your submitted files will appear in this .pdf sequentially, as specified by you on the submission page, and you will have an opportunity to enter figure captions/legends and to check the .pdf file prior to final submission. Please make sure that you proof the converted pdf file so no material is missing, and there are no conversion errors.

Now that your files are ready, visit the online submission web site. Please see here for instructions on using the online submission system.


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