2008年新创刊的Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering《细胞和分子生物工程》,ISSN: 1865-5025,季刊,美国(SPRINGER, 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10013)出版,2009年入选 Web of Science的Science Citation Index Expanded,目前在SCI数据库可以检索到该期刊2008年的第1卷第1期到2009年的第2卷第3期共82篇论文。
Behaviors of Cells: Studies of how cells sense mechanical, chemical, and electrical, events surrounding and within cells, and how cells transduce these events into biological responses. Specifically, studies of how mechanical, chemical, and electrical forces alter cell growth, differentiation, movement, signal transduction, protein secretion and transport, gene expression and regulation; studies of single cell and extracellular matrix behaviors, including their fluid- and mass-transport, viscoelastic properties, cell growth, division, spreading, rounding, crawling, adhesion, and studies on cell cytoskeleton dynamics; cell-cell and cell-ECM interactions
Computational Modeling of Molecules and Cells: Development and application of simulation models and numerical methods for the analysis, modeling, and prediction of the cell behavior as a function of intracellular and extracellular biomolecular processes. Methodologies include molecular and Langevin dynamics of biomolecules and mesoscopic modeling techniques, as well as multi-scale spatial and temporal modeling and computational methodologies, and seamless coupling of nano-micro-macro scale computational models.
Experimental Methods for Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering: Development of experimental techniques to study the mechanical, chemical, and electrical behavior of cells. Examples include local probes to deform a portion of the cell, for example via atomic force microscopy, mechanical deformation of a single cell, and simultaneous mechanical stressing of a population of cells; methods for studies of single-molecule biomechanics, including the mechanics at the attachment sites, positioning and manipulating of single molecules, imaging and measuring deformation, and applying simple or combined loads; methods for measuring and perturbing the transport and molecular binding interactions via optical, magnetic, or other physical means; advanced techniques for improved electrical measurements in single cells.
X. Edward Guo, Ph.D. Professor Department of Biomedical Engineering Columbia University New York, New York http://www.columbia.edu/~exg1
David J. Odde, Ph.D. Professor Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota http://www.umn.edu/~oddex002/
Editorial Advisory Board Van C. Mow, Chair, Columbia University Steven A. Goldstein, University of Michigan Masaaki Sato, Tohoku University Geert W. Schmid-Schoenbein, University of California, San Diego Savio L-Y Woo, University of Pittsburgh Shu Chien, University of California, San Diego
Regional Editors Asia Editor: Mian Long, Institute of Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Europe Editor: Pierre Bongrand, INSERM UMR 600 - CNRS UMR 6212
Managing Editor: Nifateria Marshall
Board of Associate Editors
Ellen M. Arruda, University of Michigan Sangeeta N. Bhatia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kerry S. Bloom, University of North Carolina Lynne Cassimeris, Lehigh University Christopher S. Chen, University of Pennsylvania Kevin D. Costa, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Richard B. Dickinson, University of Florida Dennis E. Discher, University of Pennsylvania Cheng Dong, Pennsylvania State University Harold P. Erickson, Duke University Ben Fabry, University of Erlangen-Nurenberg Daniel A. Fletcher, University of California, Berkeley Jeffrey J. Fredberg, Harvard University Huajian Gao, Brown University Donald P. Gaver, Tulane University William H. Guilford, University of Virginia Will O. Hancock, Pennsylvania State University Jason M. Haugh, North Carolina State University Jeff W. Holmes, University of Virginia Jonathan Howard, Max Planck Institute Alan J. Hunt, University of Michigan Donald E. Ingber, Harvard University Christopher R. Jacobs, Columbia University Paul A. Janmey, University of Pennsylvania Hanjoong Jo, Georgia Institute of Technology Roger D. Kamm, Masschusetts Institute of Technology Douglas A. Lauffenburger, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Joseph M. Le Doux, Georgia Instutute of Technology Philip R. Leduc, Carnegie Mellon University Marc E. Levenston, Stanford University Chwee Teck Lim, National University of Singapore Helen H. Lu, Columbia University Andrew D. McCulloch, University of California, San Diego Mohammad R. K. Mofrad, University of California, Berkeley Daniel J. Muller, University of Technology of Dresden Thomas D. Pollard, Yale University Alexander S. Popel, Johns Hopkins University David Sept, Washington University Jin-Yu Shao, Washington University Subra Suresh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ning Wang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Yu-Li Wang, Carnegie Mellon University Joyce Y. Wong, Boston University Martin L. Yarmush, Rutgers University Muhammad Zaman, University of Texas-Austin Cheng Zhu, Georgia Institute of Technology