Skip to main content Advertisement Search Explore journals Get published About BMC My account Search all BMC articles Search Frontiers in Zoology Home About Articles Submission Guidelines Establishing methods for gene function studies in emerging model organisms â a brief guide Guest : Editor Gregor Bucher Georg-August-University GÃ ttingen , Germany Submission Status : Open Submission Deadline : 31 January 2024 Frontiers in Zoology is calling for submissions to our Collection on Establishing methods for gene function studies in emerging model organisms â a brief . guide Technology has emerged that allows studying gene expression and function in many more organisms than before . Hence , new model organisms can be established thereby broadening the field of questions that can be asked
The Zoological Information Management System takes the guesswork out of animal attraction and helps promote genetic varietyName: Zoological Information Management System.Age: Eight.Continue reading... (Source: Guardian Unlimited Science)MedWorm Message: Have you tried our new medical search engine? More powerful than before. 100% free.
(Pensoft Publishers) Launched in 1884 and 1912, respectively, University of Hamburg's journal Mitteilungen aus dem Hamburgischen Zoologischen Museum und Institut and Entomologische Mitteilungen are now resurrected under the name of Evolutionary Systematics. Having joined the lines of the open access titles published on the Pensoft-developed technologically advanced journal publishing platform ARPHA, the journal remains devoted to whole-organism biology with a focus on collection-related research. The first issue of Evolutionary Systematics is live on the journal's new website. (Source: EurekAlert! - Biology)
(Center for Genomic Regulation) A genetic mutation that occurred over 700 million years ago may have contributed to the development of certain organs in human beings and other vertebrates. This change, a random error in the evolutionary process, facilitated the connection of the gene networks involved in animal embryogenesis. The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, was participated in by experts from the Centre for Genomic Regulation, the Department of Genetics from the University of Barcelona Institute of Biomedicine, and the Anton Dohrn Zoological Station in Italy. (Source: EurekAlert! - Biology)MedWorm Message: