Welcome to Cell Research
Cell Research has a broad scope in basic molecular and cell biology research, including cell growth and differentiation, signal transduction, apoptosis, stem cells, development, immunology, neurosciences, plant cell biology, chromatin modulation, epigenetics and transcription. Cell Research is China's leading journal in the life sciences.
About the cover
Free online issue
Volume 19, No 11
November 2009
ISSN: 1001-0602
EISSN: 1748-7838
2008 impact factor 4.535*
45/157 Cell Biology
Editor-in-Chief:
G Pei
* Journal Citation Reports, Thomson Reuters, 2009
FEATURED ARTICLES
ORIGINAL ARTICLE - AOP
High-coverage proteome analysis reveals the first insight of protein modification systems in the pathogenic spirochete Leptospira interrogans FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE - AOP
VEGI-armed oncolytic adenovirus inhibits tumor neovascularization and directly induces mitochondria-mediated cancer cell apoptosisORIGINAL ARTICLE
Efficient generation of hepatocyte-like cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE
p28GANK inhibits endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced cell death via enhancement of the endoplasmic reticulum adaptive capacity FREEORIGINAL ARTICLE
LsrR-binding site recognition and regulatory characteristics in Escherichia coli AI-2 quorum sensingNEWS
Reputable Research: Featured Articles from 2009
Covering a broad scope in basic molecular and cell biology research, Cell Research is proud to present ‘Reputable Research: Featured Articles from 2009’. These Original Articles and Reviews highlight the latest research on cell growth and differentiation, apoptosis, stem cells, development, signalling, immunology and epigenetics.
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Research and Reviews
Latest research highlights and reviews from the NPG family of journals
- Non-muscle myosin II takes centre stage in cell adhesion and migration Source: Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
- Reconstruction of the history of anthropogenic CO2 concentrations in the ocean Source: Nature
- Monitoring α4β7 integrin expression on circulating CD4+ T cells as a surrogate marker for tracking intestinal CD4+ T-cell loss in SIV infection - this content is FREE Source: Mucosal Immunology

