Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology (Impact Factor for 2003 of 35.0) is a monthly review journal published by Nature Publishing Group, a subsidiary of Macmillan Publishers. As its title suggests, it covers a broad range of topics and helps to combine two distinct disciplines. In its traditional sense, ‘molecular biology’ refers to study of the macromolecules essential to life — nucleic acids and proteins. The field of cell biology is a natural extension of this, integrating what we know at the molecular level into an understanding of processes and interactions at the cellular level. By combining both fields it is possible to understand how cells divide, grow, communicate and die.
The scope of the journal includes:
- Bioenergetics (photosynthesis, cellular respiration, organelle biochemistry)
- Cell death (apoptosis, necrosis)
- Cell signalling (signalling cascades, ion channels, gap junctions)
- Cell growth and division (cancer, cell cycle, cytokinesis)
- Chromosome biology (chromosome structure, chromatin, transposons)
- Cytoskeletal dynamics (cell motility, molecular motors, actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments)
- Developmental cell biology (asymmetric cell division, stem cells, developmental signalling, differentiation)
- Gene expression (transcription, splicing, RNA stability, translation, circadian rhythms)
- Membrane dynamics (membrane organization, endocytosis, exocytosis, organelle biogenesis)
- Nuclear transport (import and export of molecules to and from the cell nucleus)
- Nucleic-acid metabolism (DNA repair, recombination and replication)
- Plant cell biology
- Protein structure and metabolism (structure-function relationships, quality control, post-translational modifications, folding, translocation, degradation)
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See also
- Nature (Journal)
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External links
- Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology website (http://www.nature.com/nrm/index.html)
- Nature Reviews website (http://www.nature.com/reviews/index.html)

