WIREs Developmental Biology
Launched
By John C. Gerhart,
WIREs Developmental Biology, Editor-In-Chief
It is with great pleasure that we announce the
launch of SDB’s latest publishing initiative,
WIREs Developmental Biology, an innovative
online reference resource composed of invited
peer-reviewed articles, broadly covering
developmental biology at all levels—from the
description of developmental stages and events, to
the analysis of developmental mechanisms at the
molecular level. WIREs Developmental Biology
offers a dynamic and integrated approach to its
encyclopedic coverage of the field exposing the
interconnectivity of developmental processes.
This venture grew from conversations held in the
Society well over a decade ago regarding the need
for an authoritative discipline-encompassing
publication. It was envisioned then as print-based
encyclopedia, though the limitations of such a
static format were already evident. The continuing
explosive growth in our field, as well as the rapid
improvement of online possibilities, made it clear a
few years ago that our reference resource should be
an updateable and interactive electronic product.
Around this time, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. began
developing a novel electronic publishing model to
combine the best features of encyclopedic formats
with those of up-to-date research-oriented review
publications, and they have recently launched
Wiley
Interdisciplinary Reviews (WIREs). In
partnership with SDB and Wiley, WIREs
Developmental Biology has now launched as a
state-of-the-art online reference resource for all
of developmental biology, and can be viewed online
at
http://wires.wiley.com/devbio. It will be
accessible without restriction the first year, then
accessible to all entering a site registration the
second year, and thereafter accessible to SDB
members, as well as to subscribers.
As Editors-in-Chief of this effort,
Gail Martin,
Eric Wieschaus, and
I have relied on an outstanding board of
Associate Editors, all esteemed contributors to
research in developmental biology and all widely
informed on the subject (see list below). Jointly,
we have assembled a broad table of contents, a
stellar author base, and an unprecedented rate of
contributor acceptances of our invitations, all
marks of a strong beginning. We see ahead of us the
need to continue to identify important and
interesting subjects and to find authors to
integrate the disparate items and levels of the
field. These are areas where input from
developmental biologists will be of value to us.
The entries, all invited and peer-reviewed, range in
scope from short focus pieces to advanced research
reviews and comprehensive overviews, the
last-mentioned meant to provide the reader with the
broadest integration and orientation. In all, WIREs
Developmental Biology will cover
early embryonic development, later development
through organogenesis and cytodifferentiation, the
development of the
nervous system,
adult stem cells, tissue renewal and regeneration.
It will draw on information about a wide range of
animals, both
invertebrate and
vertebrate, from sponges to humans.
Comparative development and developmental evolution
are included as they relate development in different
groups and illuminate ancient conserved mechanisms
and reveal the evolutionary modification of
mechanisms. Specific
birth defects are discussed in terms of the
underlying developmental impairments. For purposes
of illuminating the elemental processes and
molecular commonalities of development, entries are
included on
gene expression mechanisms and transcriptional
hierarchies, on widely-used intercellular
signaling pathways, and on the means of
establishing spatial and temporal patterns in
the embryo.
Plant development and plant cell types are
presented both as a separate section as well as
within other sections, where applicable.
Commentaries and opinion pieces will be included
where interesting issues and hypotheses are in flux.
Author updates and reader comments will be
incorporated over time.
In order to enhance the accessibility and usefulness
of all this material, WIREs Dev Bio has
enabled the cross-linking of content by key words
and subjects, reference linking, links to other
reference sources and glossaries, and to other
relevant sites, including the
SDB Collaborative
Resources (CoRe) site described below. This
linkage will allow the reader to connect particular
events of development to those occurring before and
after, and elsewhere in the embryo, and to embryos
of other organisms. It will connect the levels of
mechanism from anatomy and morphology to cell
biology, molecular genetics, and regulatory
mechanisms.
We are very enthusiastic about WIREs Dev Bio
and its future. We aim for this publication to
measure up to the grandeur of the subject and
believe that as the field grows, it has the
potential to fill the research and teaching needs of
developmental biologists, and also of the broader
community of researchers and scholars.
In coordination with this and other SDB
publications, including their official journal
Developmental Biology, the Society has launched
a companion website—SDB
CoRe, an online community of learning for
developmental biology. The site will display
beautiful images, movies, animations, normal tables
of developing organisms and key experimental
results, as well as schematic diagrams and brief
explanations of developmental biology concepts. In
addition, both the WIREs and CoRe websites
provide a feedback forum for comments on articles
and visuals of interest. All of this is in alignment
with the Society’s commitment to the dissemination
of scientific information about developmental
biology. The membership and the community will
benefit from access to a wide variety of resources
and interactive components on the Society website
that, along with its affiliated publications,
maximize communication and exchange of educational
materials and teaching tools.
Editors in Chief:
John C. Gerhart, University of California,
Berkeley
Gail R. Martin, University of California, San
Francisco
Eric F. Wieschaus, Princeton University
Editorial Board:
Richard Behringer, University of Texas MD
Anderson Cancer Center- Comparative Development and
Evolution
Richard Harland, University of California,
Berkeley- Early Embryonic Development
Brigid Hogan, Duke University Medical Center-
Vertebrate Organogenesis
Alexandra L. Joyner, Sloan-Kettering Institute-
Nervous System Development
Mike Levine, University of California, Berkeley-
Gene Expression and Transcriptional Hierarchies
Susan Mango, Harvard University- Invertebrate
Organogenesis
Roel Nusse, Stanford University- Signaling
Pathways
Norbert Perrimon, Harvard Medical School-
Technologies
Scott Poethig, University of Pennsylvania- Cell
Types and Issues Specific to Plants
Jonathan Slack, University of Minnesota-
Establishment of Spatial and Temporal Patterns
Allan Spradling, Carnegie Institution for
Science- Adult Stem Cells, Tissue Renewal, and
Regeneration
Paul A. Trainor, Stowers Institute for Medical
Research- Birth Defects
|