Journal overview

This journal has ceased (2018).

Aims & Scope:

Scope: Cellular Logistics covers the organization of the flow of molecules, information and energy to their destinations, inside and outside of cells.

During the past two decades, the extremely dynamic cell biology field has made tremendous progress in identifying molecular machinery components, elucidating mechanisms and revealing their regulation. This information forms the basis for the emerging new discipline of cellular logistics. Cellular logistics is key for multiple biological processes, such as cell polarity, signaling and development, and is highly relevant to human health.

Aims: Cellular Logistics provides a platform for presenting and discussing cutting-edge research on all aspects of cellular logistics by a multidisciplinary community of scientists.

Cellular Logistics topics include:
• Compartments and pathways: compartment biogenesis, maturation and propagation
• Mechanisms: building molecular machines, translocation across and transport between membranes, vesicle formation and coats, compartment and vesicle motility, tethering and fusion
• Regulation: post-translational modifications, GTPases and step integration
• Logistics of biological processes: e.g., cell polarity, cell cycle, biological clocks, signaling and development
• Human disease, host–pathogen interactions and pathogen exploitation

Paper Formats: Cellular Logistics offers a variety of paper formats including:
• Original Research articles
• Short Reports
• Reviews
• Commentaries
• Extra Views
• Methods and Tool Box manuscripts

Submissions: at http://cellularlog.msubmit.net/cgi-bin/main.plex
All submissions are assessed by the Editor-in-Chief and, if found suitable for Cellular Logistics, are peer-reviewed by experts.

Peer Review: Cellular Logistics has an outstanding Editorial Board. Manuscripts will be reviewed without bias, with the aim of adding new and empirical information to this growing field.

Open Access policy: Immediate Open Access can be purchased for a reasonable fee. All articles become Free Access one year after publication.


Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Group, 530 Walnut Street, Suite 850, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
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