Manuscripts should not contain the work that
has been reported in large part in a published paper or is contained
in another manuscript that has been submitted or accepted for publication
elsewhere, in print or in electronic media. Preliminary reports
such as abstracts or posters at professional meetings are not considered
as redundant or duplicate publications. The submission for publication
should be approved by all the authors.
Manuscripts may take the form of an Article or Minireview. Contributors
will find information on the preparation and submission of manuscripts
in these Instructions to Authors. These Instructions are arranged
as follows:
1. General Information
2. Preparation of Manuscript
3. Preparation of Tables and Illustrations
4. Preparation of Supplementary Material
5. Chemical and Mathematical Usage, Abbreviations, and Symbols
6. Ethics
Manuscripts that fail to conform to these guidelines may
be returned to authors for revision before review.
1.
General Information
1. All manuscripts should be submitted to
the BMB reports Web site at http://bmbreports.org. For submissions,
you will need to upload Word file of the text of the manuscript
(including title, key words, abbreviations, main text, and references)
as a single word file. Upload your figures separately as .png, .gif,
or .jpeg files. Tables should be uploaded as .doc or .xls files.
2. The manuscript should be accompanied by
a cover letter indicating the postal and e-mail address, telephone
number, and facsimile number of the corresponding author. In addition,
written proof that permission to cite personal communications and
preprints has been granted should be included if required.
3. Manuscripts can be submitted as articles
and minireviews.
Articles may be submitted on a broad range of subjects of general
interest to scientists in the field of biochemistry, molecular biology,
and biomedical science. The length
of the manuscripts should not exceed 4300 words including figure
legend and references. The total number of figures and tables should
not exceed four. Any figure larger than half a page will be counted
as two figures.
4. Minireviews should cover an aspect of biochemistry,
molecular biology, and biomedical science that are topical and novel
at the time of submission. The majority of minireviews are commissioned;
however, noncommissioned articles may be considered at the editors'
discretion. All minireviews, whether commissioned or not, undergo
regular peer review. Reviews are intended to be succinct discussions
dealing with a particular question of current interest. Minireviews
should not exceed 6,000 words in length and 3 figures and/or tables
in display must include abstracts of 200 words or fewer, and must
have no more than 100 references.
5. If a contributors does not return the revised
manuscript to the editor within six weeks after the request for
revision, the contribution will be considered withdrawn.
6. Foreign authors should resubmit their revised
manuscript to BMB Reports upon request of English-language editing.
Korean authors should pay English-language editing fees to KSBMB
after their manuscript is accepted. If authors submit a certificate
with proof of English-language editing, KSBMB will not process the
manuscript for further revision.
7. If a manuscript is declined, the author has
the right of appeal, if it is believed that the editors have made
an erroneous judgment. A letter should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief
presenting the reasons why the editorial decision should be reconsidered.
8. Accepted manuscripts will be published with
the implicit understanding that the authors will pay the costs of
publication including page charges. Illustrations, photographs,
electron micrographs, color plates and other special illustrations
will be reproduced at the author's expense at cost prices. Alteration
in page proofs, other than correction of printer's errors, are not
granted, except when the Editor allows addition of a brief note
added in proofs at the author's expense. page proofs corrected by
authors should be returned to the Editor by a designated date. Otherwise,
the Editor reserves the right of proofreading.
9. As a condition of publication, authors must transfer copyright,
which shall be assigned to editorial office to BMB Reports. All
authors must sign a copyright transfer form, or the signing author
must obtain permission from any co-authors.
2. Preparation of Manuscript
1. A desirable plan for the organization
of a paper is the following: (a) Abstract, (b) Introduction (c)
Results, (d) Discussion, (e) Materials and Methods, (f) Acknowledgments
(g) References. In some cases, presentation will be clearer and
more effective if the author combines some of these sections.
(¥¡) Title Page should include the following items.
a. The form of the paper (Article) and the field under which the
paper is to be reviewed.
b. The title should be informative and as short as is consistent
with clarity. The numbering
of parts in a series of papers is not permitted,
but titles and subtitles may be used if necessary.
c. List full names of all authors. A footnote to an author, indicating
a change of address,
should be given on the title page using one of the
following superscript: 1, 2, 3. The asterisk symbol £ªshould be
reserved for the author to
whom correspondence should be addressed.
d. List the institutions in which the work was carried out. Identify
the affiliations of all authors
and their institutions, departments, or
organizations by use of superscript lower case alphabets.
e. Provide a short running title of less than 50 characters.
f. The name, phone and fax number, complete postal and e-mail
address of the person to whom
correspondence should be sent.
(¥¢) Every paper must begin with a brief abstract
(up to 150 words) presenting the plan, procedures, and significant
results of the investigation. The abstract should be intelligible
to the nonspecialists as well as the specialists in the field, and,
hence, should avoid specialized terms and abbreviations. On the
abstract page authors should supply about five keywords descriptive
of the research carried out.
(¥£) Introduction should state the purpose of the
investigation and its relation to other works in the same field,
but should not include an extensive review of the literature.
( ¥¤ ) Results may be presented in tables or figures,
but many simple findings can be set forth directly in the text with
no need for tables or figures. The Discussion should be concise
and deal with the interpretation of the results. In some cases combining
Results and Discussion in a single section may give a clearer, more
compact presentation.
( ¥¥ ) Materials and Methods should be brief, but
adequate for repetition of the work by a qualified operator. Refer
to previously published procedures employed in the work by citation
of both the original description and pertinent published modifications.
Do not include extensive write-ups unless they present substantially
new modifications. Manufacturers cited in the text should be styled,
for example, as Sigma Chemical Co..
( ¥¦ ) References to the paper should be numbered
in one consecutive series. The reference should be marked with Arabic
numbers in text parenthesis in the body of the paper.
1. Mondal, R., Ganguly, T., Chanda, P. K., Bandhu,
A., Jana, B., Sau, K., Lee, C. Y. and Sau, S. (2010) Stabilization
of the primary sigma factor of Staphylococcus aureus by core RNA
polymerase. BMB Rep. 43, 176-181.
2. Goldberg, A. L. and Gaff, S. A. (1986) The selective
degradation of abnormalproteins in bacteria; in Maximizing Gene
Expression (Reznikoff, W. and Gold, L., eds.), pp. 287-314, Butterworths,
Burlington, U.S.A.
4. Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. and Maniatis, T.
(1989) Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, pp. 100-110, Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York, U.S.A.
You can download the EndNote output style
for BMB reports by clicking the following icon. 
Download and save the file into your EndNote Styles folder on
your computer.
For example on Windows -
C:\Program Files\Endnote X3\Styles or on Macs - Macintosh HD,
Applications, EndNote X3, Styles.
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3. Preparation of
Tables and Illustrations
1. Tables should be numbered consecutively with
Arabic numerals in order of appearance in the text. Type each table
double-spaced on a separate page with a short descriptive title
typed directly above and with essential footnotes below. Footnotes
to tables should be identified with the italic superscript lower
case (e.g., a, b, etc.), and placed at the bottom of the
table.
2. Figures should be approximately the same size as you would like
them to appear in press. Please prepare and save your figures as
.png, .gif, or ..jpeg (at least 300 dpi).
3. Number figures consecutively with Arabic numerals. Please visit
our Web site at http://bmbreports.org for detailed instructions
on preparing electronic artwork.
4. Preparation of
Supplementary Material
1. BMB Reports now accepts electronic supplementary material to
support and enhance your scientific research. Supplementary files
offer additional possibilities for publishing supporting applications,
movies, animation sequences, high-resolution images, background
datasets, sound clips, and more.
2. Supplementary files supplied will be published online alongside
the electronic version of your article in BMB Reports Web products.
To ensure that your submitted material is directly usable, please
provide the data in one of our recommended file formats. Authors should
submit the material in electronic format together with the article
and supply a concise and descriptive caption for each file. Please
note, however, that supplementary material will not appear in the
printed journal. For more details, please see http://bmbreports.org
5. Chemical and Mathematical Usage,
Abbreviations, and Symbols
Please visit our Web site at http://bmbreports.org
for detailed instructions.
6. Ethics
When conducting scientific research using human tissue
ntended for publication in BMB Reports, authors should follow procedures
that are in accordance with ethical standards as formulated in the
Helsinki Declaration of 1975 (revised 1983). When conducting experiments
on animals, authors should adhere to the local or national requirements
for the care and use of laboratory animals.

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