Instruction for Authors


Instructions to Authors for manuscript submission

You may use "Gene Editing" manuscript template for your submission.  

Click to download "Gene Editing" manuscript template

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Manuscript Instructions

Manuscript template: Full title must be in sentence case

Abstract: This document is a template for use by authors sending manuscripts to the “Gene Editing” Journal. The title of the manuscript must be written in lower case except for the first word and proper nouns. Do not include author names or affiliations here. The abstract must not be longer than 200 words and must clearly state the study’s purpose and results. The manuscript’s title and abstract must not contain mathematical formulae. The abstract must not contain any reference citations. A maximum of 10 key words or phrases must be given that will be useful for retrieval and indexing. The key words must be separated by commas and should not include acronyms.

Key words: Gene editing, instructions for authors, manuscript template

1.Introduction

The Introduction should argue the case for the study, outlining only essential background, and should not include the findings or the conclusions. It should not be a review of the subject area, but should finish with a clear statement of the question being addressed. It is recommend to divided into 3-4 paragraphs.Manuscript content

Authors should use this template when preparing a manuscript for submission to the “Gene Editing” Journal. The manuscript should be written in Microsoft Word. The text in the relevant sections of the template can be replaced by typing or copying and pasting, or the Styles given in the template can be used. Styles can be applied to selected sections of the text as shown in the Figure.

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Figure. Figure legend.

Research articles should be divided into the sections listed below. Principal sections should be numbered consecutively (1. Introduction, 2. Materials and methods, etc.) and subsections should be numbered 1.1., 1.2., etc. Do not number the Acknowledgements or References sections.

Manuscripts must be written in English. Contributors who are not native English speakers are strongly advised to ensure that a colleague fluent in the English language or a professional language editor has reviewed their manuscript. Concise English without jargon should be used. Repetitive use of long sentences and passive voice should be avoided. It is strongly recommended that the text be run through computer spelling and grammar programs. Either British or American spelling is acceptable but must be consistent throughout.

All manuscripts are checked for their compliance with the Instructions for Authors. Manuscripts not complying with the instructions will not be submitted to referees for evaluation.

Manuscripts must be double-spaced with 3-cm margins on all sides of the page, in Times New Roman font size 12. Every page of the manuscript, including the title page, references, tables, etc., should be numbered. The manuscript must also have line numbers starting with 1 on each consecutive page.

Symbols, units, and abbreviations

In general, the journal follows the conventions of Scientific Style and Format, The CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers, Council of Science Editors, Reston, VA, USA (7th ed.). If symbols such as ×, µ, η, or ν are used, they should be added using the Symbol menu of Word. Degree symbols (°) must be used from the Symbol menu, not superscripted letter o or number 0. Multiplication symbols must be used (×), not the letter x. Spaces must be inserted between numbers and units (e.g., 3 kg) and between numbers and mathematical symbols (+, –, ×, =, <, >), but not between numbers and percent symbols (e.g., 45%). Please use SI units. All abbreviations and acronyms should be defined at first mention. Latin terms such as et al., in vitro, or in situ should not be italicised. Use hectare instead of acre or decare.

Reference citations

References should be cited in the text by the last name(s) of the author(s) and year of publication as shown in the Table.

All references cited in the manuscript must appear in the list of references at the end and all references listed in the reference list must be cited in the manuscript. When multiple references are cited in the same sentence, the citations must appear in chronological order from oldest to newest.

Type of reference

Examples of citations

Reference with 1 author

(Sancar, 2007)

According to Sancar (2017)…

Reference with 2 authors

(Sancar and Kocabas, 2001)

Reference with 3 or more authors

(Simsek et al., 2012)

References by the same author(s) in the same year

(Sancar et al., 2004a, 2004b)

Multiple references cited in the same sentence

(Sancar, 2006; Kocabas et al., 2012; Sancar et al., 2004a, 2004b)

Table. How to cite references.

2.Materials and methods

Please provide concise but complete information about the materials and the analytical and statistical procedures used. This part should be as clear as possible to enable other scientists to repeat the research presented. Brand names and company locations should be supplied for all mentioned equipment, instruments, chemicals, etc.

3.Results

The same data or information given in a Table must not be repeated in a Figure and vice versa. It is not acceptable to repeat extensively the numbers from Tables in the text or to give lengthy explanations of Tables or Figures.

Tables and Figures

All illustrations (photographs, drawings, graphs, etc.), not including tables, must be labelled “Figure”. Figures must be submitted both in the manuscript and as separate files. All tables and figures must have a caption and/or legend and be numbered (e.g., Table 1, Figure 2), unless there is only one table or figure, in which case it should be labelled “Table” or “Figure” with no numbering. Captions must be written in sentence case (e.g., Macroscopic appearance of the samples.). The font used in the figures should be Times New Roman. If symbols such as ×, μ, η, or ν are used, they should be added using the Symbol menu of Word.

All tables and figures must be numbered consecutively as they are referred to in the text. Please refer to tables and figures with capitalisation and unabbreviated (e.g., “As shown in Figure 2…”, and not “Fig. 2” or “figure 2”). The tables and figures themselves should be given at the end of the text only, after the references, not in the running text.

The resolution of images should not be less than 118 pixels/cm when width is set to 16 cm. Images must be scanned at 1200 dpi resolution and submitted in jpeg or tiff format.

Graphs and diagrams must be drawn with a line weight between 0.5 and 1 point. Graphs and diagrams with a line weight of less than 0.5 point or more than 1 point are not accepted. Scanned or photocopied graphs and diagrams are not accepted.

Charts must be prepared in 2 dimensions unless required by the data used. Charts unnecessarily prepared in 3 dimensions are not accepted.

Figures that are charts, diagrams, or drawings must be submitted in a modifiable format, i.e. our graphics personnel should be able to modify them. Therefore, if the program with which the figure is drawn has a “save as” option, it must be saved as *.ai or *.pdf. If the “save as” option does not include these extensions, the figure must be copied and pasted into a blank Microsoft Word document as an editable object. It must not be pasted as an image file (tiff, jpeg, or eps) unless it is a photograph. Tables and figures, including caption, title, column heads, and footnotes, must not exceed 16 × 20 cm and should be no smaller than 8 cm in width. For all tables, please use Word’s “Create Table” feature, with no tabbed text or tables created with spaces and drawn lines.

Tables must be clearly typed, each on a separate sheet, and double-spaced. Tables may be continued on another sheet if necessary, but the dimensions stated above still apply.

4.Discussion

Statements from the Introduction and Results sections should not be repeated here. The final paragraph should highlight the main conclusions of the study. The Results and Discussion sections may be combined.

Acknowledgement and/or disclaimers, if any

Names of funding organisations should be written in full.

References

Do not include personal communications or unpublished data or materials (such as project final reports, websites, computer programs, poster papers, presentations, and manuscripts that are not published yet) as references. However, these materials may be inserted as a footnote in the main text. The footnotes for websites should be given in the format shown below:

NCBI (2017). GenBank Overview [online]. Website https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/ [accessed 00 Month Year].

UniProt (2018). Animal toxin annotation project [online].Website: https://www.uniprot.org/program/Toxins [ac-cessed 00 Month Year].

If the author of a reference is an organisation or corporation, use its name in the reference list (using an abbreviation in the citation, if appropriate); do not use “Anonymous”. In the case of publications in languages other than English, the published English title should be provided if one exists, with an annotation such as “(article in Turkish with an abstract in English)”. If the publication was not published with an English title, provide the original title only; do not provide a self-translation.

References should be listed alphabetically at the end of the text without numbering. All authors should be included in reference lists unless there are 6 or more, in which case only the first 5 should be given, followed by ‘et al.’. The manuscript should be checked carefully to ensure that the spellings of the authors’ names and the years are exactly the same in the text as given in the reference list. References should be formatted as follows (please note the punctuation and capitalisation):

Journal articles

Journal titles should not be abbreviated; the whole name of the journal should be given. Include the doi number if one exists.

Aly M, Tork S, Al-Garni S, Allam R (2013). Production and characterization of uricase from Streptomyces exfoliates UR10 isolated from farm wastes. Gene Editing. 01 (5): 520-529. doi: 10.3906/111-1111-3.

Tancharoen W, Aungsuchawan S, Pothacharoen P, Markmee R, Narakornsak S et al. (2017). Differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells from human amniotic fluid to vascular endothelial cells. Acta Histochemica 119 (2): 113-121. doi: 10.1016/j.acthis.2016.11.009.

Kara K (1999). Dexiinae (Diptera: Tachinidae) species of Tokat province. Gene Editing 23: 203-210 (in Turkish with an abstract in English).

Pinheiro JW, Fonseca NAN, Silva CA, Cabrera L, Bruneli FAT et al. (2002). Farelo de girassol na alimentação de frangos de corte em diferentes fases de desenvolvimento. Revista Brasileira de Zootecnia 31 (3): 1418-1425 (in Portuguese). doi: 10.1590/s1516-35982002000600013

Books and reports

Cowen MK (2011). Microbiology: A System Approach. 3rd ed. New York, NY, USA: McGraw-Hill.

Nei M, Kumar S (2000). Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics. 1st ed. New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press.

Chapters in books

Aebi HE, Bergmeyer J, Grabl M (1983). Catalase in methods of enzymatic analysis. In: Bergmeyer HU, Bergmeyer J, Grabi M (editors). Methods of Enzymatic Analysis. Weinheim, Germany: Verlag Chimie, pp. 273-286.

Conference proceedings

Yilmaz J (2017). DNA methylation as a mechanism that facilitates target search by transcriptional activators. In: 2nd International Conference on Molecular Biology, Nucleic Acids & Molecular Medicine; Philadelphia, PA, USA. p. 34.

Theses

Kocabas A (2000). Molecular biology and genetics of lipid biosynthesis: the system is an essential component of quorum sensing global regulation. PhD, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey.

Installing Gene Editing Journal Endnote style for references

  1. Download the "Gene Editing" style from from here.
  2. Double-click the style file. It should open in EndNote.
  3. In EndNote, go to “File Menu” and choose “Save As”. Replace the word “copy” with your style’s name and click “Save”.
  4. Click on “File Menu” and choose “Close Style”.

Further instructions are provided here: https://endnote.com/downloads/styles/

 

Fees and indexing

The goal of "Gene Editing" journal is to improve the research culture and help knowledge spread rapidly in the academic world by providing an academic platform in the rapidly expanding field of gene editing.

Published articles in the "Gene Editing" journal is available online for free at http://www.genediting.net/

 

Fee and publication policy

• Free submission and publication

• Free access

• No page charges

• No fees for color printing*

All responsibility for the scientific content and statements in an article published in the "Gene Editing" journal belongs to the authors.

 

Indexing

•Indexed in CROSSREF 

•All accepted articles are assigned a DOI number

•Studies to include "Gene Editing" journal in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-E), PubMed, and Google Scholar are in progress.

 

*The Gene Editing Journal is currently waiving fees for color printing.