Journal Sponsorship

Publisher


1 Aim and Scope



Legume Genomics and Genetics is committed to serving for legume genomics and genetics, especiallly featuring innovative research findings in the basic and applied fields of structural genomics, functional genomics, protemics, epigenomics in Leguminosae, as well as legume genetics from the molecular level to whole plant level.



 



All papers chosen for publishing should be innovative research work in field of legume genomics and genetics in the areas of genome structure, genome-scale analysis, functional genomics, proteomics, epigenomics, and genetics from molecular level to the whole plant level. The primary criteria for publication are the interestings that need not only to meet specific interesting of scientists in the fields of legume genomics and genetics, but also to satisfy the populations of this journals who are engaging in the areas of general biology and applied genomics.



 



2 Manuscripts Submission



2.1 Online submission



Manuscripts must be submitted to Legume Genomics and Genetics electronically using the online submission system. Full details of how to submit a manuscript are given in the instructions for authors. In cases that online submission system is not available, you can submit your manuscript to the submission email of Legume Genomics & Genetics: edit@lgg.cropscipublisher.ca. If both of the above ways do not work out, you can directly send your manuscripts to service@SophiaPublisher.com. The editors will handle your submission within five working days.



 



Preferred file formats of manuscripts are Microsoft Word and Rich Text Format (RTF). Figures, tables, movies and raw data can be submitted as supplementally files.



 



A cover letter must be submitted along with the manuscript during the submission, which should contain a brief explanation of what was previously known, the conceptual advance provided by the findings, and the importance of the findings to a broad readership, as well as how and why their major findings relate to the scope of the journal. Closely related papers submitted elsewhere or in press should be noted in the cover letter and uploaded as additional supplementally files in the online submission system. The cover letter is confidential to the editor and will not be seen by reviewers.



 



2.2 Corresponding Author



The full name, the contact information, and e-mail address of the corresponding author should be provided. We take the corresponding author as the responsible author, which means that the corresponding author accepts such a responsibility: The corresponding author must warrant that all co-authors have read and approved the authorship of the manuscript, the content of the paper, and its submission to LGG. Official approval of all original authors must be provided before any changes in authorship. All reasonable demands on the necessary materials and methods which can justify the experimental results must be satisfied. Please inform the editorial office if the contact information of the corresponding author changes after submission.



 



3 Article processing



Specialists from all over the world are chosen as peer reviewers of Legume Genomics & Genetics. Submitted manuscripts will be sent to three peer reviewers chosen automatically by the online manuscript handling system based on their title and keywords. (see CropSci Publisher peer review policy for further information)



 



Legume Genomics and Genetics offers a fast publication schedule (normally 2~4 weks) whilst maintaining rigorous peer review. The use of recommended electronic formats for article delivery expedites the process. Research articles will be published electronically in provisional PDF immediately upon acceptance. A fully structured web version, and accompanying laid out PDF, will be published within four weeks of acceptance.



 



Legume Genomics and Genetics is affiliated with other biology journals published by CropSci Publisher, including Genomics and Applied Biology and other journals. If referees judge that a manuscript is sound but not of special interest and therefore not appropriate for Legume Genomics and Genetics, the referee reports can be shared with other journals published by CropSci Publisher. Transferring a manuscript from one journal to another will not incur delays. Conversely, if a manuscript submitted to a sister journal in the CropSci Publisher series is judged to be of exceptional interest by the referees and editors. We may offer publication in Legume Genomics & Genetics.



 



4 Article-processing charges



Legume Genomics and Genetics levies an peer review charge for each submitted manuscript to cover the costs of peer review, and an article-processing charge for every accepted article to cover the costs incurred by open access publication.



 



Article-processing charge for all CropSci Publisher journals is uniform. CropSci Publisher's standard article-processing charge is Canadian dollar 1200 CAD (US dollar $1200), which has no any tax fee included. For authors from the Canada, their article processing charges levied by CropSci Publisher contain 12% of HST tax fee, and this tax fee will be listed solely upon invoice. For authors other than from the Canada, their article processing charges are exclusive of any tax fees. For further information please see Charge FAQ.


Sponsors


Legume Genomics and Genetics (ISSN 1925-1580), is an open access, international, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research papers relevant to genomics and genetics in legume plants.



 



Most research articles published in Legume Genomics and Genetics are organized into the following sections: Title page (Title and byline, Author(s) and affiliation(s), Abstract, Keywords, Introduction of the corresponding author), Background, Results, Discussion, Materials and Methods, Authors' contributions, Acknowledgments, References, Figure Legends, and Tables. Manuscripts should be easy to read and their contents presented clearly, with line number and page number. Figures and Tables should be put at the end of Text (or listed as Supplementary File), each page for one Figure/Table. Click HERE to download a standard manuscript preparation.



 



1. Title and byline



A title gives the reader a clear idea of what the article is about. It should be brief, novel and informative, which could invite readers' interest. The usual limit for title is less than 25 words. Abbreviations and acronyms, including those for gene and protein names, should be avoided in titles. Common names are allowed for major model systems (maize, rice, yeast). Latin names should be used for all organisms that have no widely accepted common name.



 



2. Author(s) and affiliation(s)



Authorship should be limited to those who have contributed substantially to the work. Please note the corresponding authors and their e-mails. Chinese authors' English name should be written in Chinese spell with the first letter of the family name and surname in capital, without hyphen between family name. For authors from other countries, their given names should be shortened to initials followed by a dot between characters. The authors' institution should be written below their names.



 



3. Abstract



The abstract should summarize for a broad audience the main information, including the question being addressed, the approach taken, and the major findings and their significance. It should also be concise (approximately 200~250 words) and independent. General background should be reserved for the introduction. Avoid using too professional words, special symbols, and formula. Literature references should not be included.



 



4. Keywords



List 4~6 keywords which can be used for indexing purposes.



 



5. Background



This section should provide the necessary background information for the average reader, the current situation, and research intention. It should be both complete and concise, just like a mini-review. Previous publications that form a basis for the work presented must be cited.



 



6. Results



This section should be divided with subheadings. Footnotes should not be used.



 



7. Discussion



The Discussion focused on the interpretation of the results and place. It should not be redundant with the Results section. This section may contain subheadings. Insecure sentence like "which needs further research" is discouraged in this section.



 



8. Materials and methods



The section, at minimum, should include enough detail for readers to understand the general experimental design and to be able to assess the data presented. Cite previously published procedures in References. Modifications of previously published procedures should be pointed out. Truly new procedures should be described in detail. Animals, plants, pathogens, and insects or pests should present Latin names. A more detailed version of the procedures and details such as oligo sequences, strains, and specifics of how constructs were made can be included in Supplemental Information.



 



9. Authors' contributions



In order to give appropriate credit to each author of a paper, the individual contributions of authors to the manuscript should be specified in this section.



 



An "author" is generally considered to be someone who has made substantive intellectual contributions to a published study. To qualify as an author one should: (1) have made substantial contributions to conception and design, or acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; (2) have been involved in drafting the manuscript or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and (3) have given final approval of the version to be published. Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for appropriate portions of the content. Acquisition of funding, collection of data, or general supervision of the research group, alone, does not justify authorship.



 



We suggest the following kind of format (please use initials to refer to each author's contribution): AB carried out the molecular genetic studies, participated in the sequence alignment and drafted the manuscript. JY carried out the immunoassays. MT participated in the sequence alignment. ES participated in the design of the study and performed the statistical analysis. FG conceived of the study, and participated in its design and coordination and helped to draft the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.



 



10. Acknowledgments



Acknowledgments of people, grants, funds, etc. should be placed in a separate section before the reference list. The names of funding organizations should be written in full. Please check this section carefully before publication, as amendments or corrections are not allowed after publication.



 



11. References



Only papers that are published or in press papers should be cited in the reference list. Personal communications should be cited within the text only. Submitted articles should be cited as unpublished data, data not shown, or personal communication. All authors should be named in the citation. Provide inclusive page ranges for journal articles and book chapters.



 



Formats



1. Heading



Number the first level headings as follows: Results: "1", Discussion: "2", Materials and methods: "3"; Mark the second level headings with 1.1, 1.2......, and the third level headings with 1.1.1, 1.1.2......; Lower level headings should be avoided. Acknowledgements and references are not numbered.



 



2. Terminology



Please use the standard mathematical notation for formulae, symbols etc, Genus and species names should be in italics. Use internationally accepted signs and symbols for units, SI units [e.g., s (seconds), min (minute), h (hour).d (day), m (meter), m2 (square meter), hm2 (hectre), L (liter), g (gram), kg (kilogram), mol (morgan), J (joule) for energy, work, and calories, ×g or r/min for centrifugal force, mol/L for solution concentration, pa for pressure, cM for inheritance distance, kd for molecular weight, kb or bp for DNA fragment length]. Dots are used to separate composite units, e.g., mol•dm-2•m-1.



 



3. Abbreviations



Abbreviations should be defined at first mention and used consistently thereafter.



 



4. Tables



All tables are to be numbered using Arabic numerals. Tables should always be cited in text in consecutive numerical order. For each table, the table title explaining the components of the table is necessary. Table legend, if there is one, are placed beneath the table. Identify any previously published material and/or data by giving the original source in the form of a reference in Table legend.



 



The *, **, and *** are always used in this order to show statistical significance at the 0.05, 0.01, and 0.001 probability levels, and cannot be used for other notes. Lack of significance is usually indicated by NS. Footnotes to tables should be indicated by superscript lower-case letters (or asterisks for significance values and other statistical data) and be included in the Table legend.



 



5. Figure



Legume Genomics and Genomics requires electronic figures that are as small and simple as is compatible with clarity. Number figures consecutively according to the order in which they are called out in the text. Figures should be unambiguous and as conceptual as possible and should provide enough information so that the reader can understand them without significant input from the text. Format sequence data preferably to one-column width for shorter sequences and two- column width for longer sequences. Make sure that the fonts in sequences are easily readable. Use the same fonts for all figures. For those figures that contain more than one panel, designate the panels with capital letters (no parentheses and no periods following letters) in the upper left-hand corner of each panel.



 



Each figure should have its corresponding legend below the figure. Provide a short title for each figure. Figure legends should be concise and should not repeat information presented in the text. Figure panels that are designated with capital letters should have specific subtitles in the legend and should be described separately and completely. Symbols and abbreviations that are used in the figure should be defined in the legend.



 



6. Reference



The Harvard (author, date) system of referencing in the text is used (examples are given below). In the text give the author's name followed by the year in parentheses: (John, 2000). If there are two authors use 'and': (Smith and Jones, 2001). When reference is made to a work by three or more authors, the first name followed by et al. should be used: (MacDonald et al., 2002). If more than one work is cited within parentheses, separate citations using a semi-colon (Friedman 1994; Wang et al. 1997), except in the case where the author of the works is the same. In which case the author's name should not be repeated, only the years should be divided with a semi-colon (Smith 2000; 2002). In the reference list, references should be listed in alphabetical order.



 



We recommend authors using EndNote to manage the references, CropSci Publisher provides an output style that supports the formatting of in-text citations and reference list:



 



EndNote style (2 kb)



(1) Journal article



Format: author's name, year, article title, journal name, volume (issue): page range



 



a. Only one author



Jiang S.Y., 2003, Rice mutant population and its applications on functional genomics, Molecular Plant Breeding, 1(2): 137-150



Citation in the text: (Jiang, 2003)



 



b. Two authors



Fukui K., and Iijima K., 1991, Somatic chromosome map of rice by imaging methods, Theor. Appl. Genet., 81: 589-596



Citation in the text: (Fukui and Iijima, 1991)



 



c. 3 or more than 3 authors



Causse M.A., Fulton T.M., Cho Y.G., Ahn S.N., Chunwongse J., Wu K., Xiao J., Yu Z., Ronald P.C., Harrington S.E., Second G., McCouch S.R., and Tanksley S.D., 1994, Saturated molecular map of the rice genome based on an interspecific backcross population, Genetics, 138: 1251-1274



Citation in the text: (Causse et al., 1994)



 



(2) Private communications, information and data on the internet: just cite in the text



Format for private communications: (Wu Weiren, 2003, private communications)



 



Format for information and data on the internet: (Lin Gang and He Mei, 2002, www.wenweipo_com. htm) or (http://info.Jstage.jst.go.jp/contents/info/list/eng.html)



 



(3) Book



Format: authors' names, ed., year published, book name, edition number, publisher, publishing location (country and city), pp.page number



 



Altman A., and Waisel Y., eds., 1997, Biology of root formation and development, Plenum Press, New York and London, pp.376



 



Buchanan B.B., Gruissem W., and Jones R.L., eds., Qu L.J., Gu H.Y., Bai S.N., Zhao J.G., and Chen Z.L., trans., 2004, Biochemistry & molecular biology of plants, Science Press, Beijing, China, pp.250-288



 



(4) Symposium or book chapter



Format: authors' names, year published, article title, In: Symposium editors name+(ed.), Symposium name, publisher, publishing location (country and city), pp.page number



 



Shoemaker R.C., Polzin K.M., Lorenzen L.L., and Specht J.E., 1996, Molecular genetic mapping of soybean, In: Verma D.P.S., and Shoe maker R.C. (eds.), Soybean: genetics, molecular biology and biotechnology, CIAB International, Wallingford, UK, pp.37-56



 



Zhang Q.F., 2007, Toward the development of green super rice using genomics-based strategies, In: Li Z.K., Fang X.J.(eds.), Proceedings of the 2nd international conference of plant molecular breeding, 23~27, March, Sanya, Hainan, China, pp.3



 



(5) Dissertation



Format: authors' names, year published, Dissertation name, Thesis for M.S./Dissertation for Ph.D., Affiliation, Supervisor, pp.page number



 



Jiang L.R., 2004, Improvement of appearance traits of elite rice Zhenshan 97B by molecular introgression of targeted about 800 kb interval from indica rice Jia-fuzhan genome, Thesis for M.S., Life Science and Technology Institute, Guangxi University, Supervisor: Fang X.J., pp.453-454



 



Wan Y.S., 2002, Construction of soybean genetic map and QTL analysis of some agronomic traits, Dissertation for Ph.D., Biotechnology Research Institute CAAS, Supervisor: Jia S.R., and Fang X.J., pp.37-39



 



(6) Patent document



Format: Patent Assignee Names, year authorized or open, patent title, patent country, patent / application number



 



Liu Q.L., Bai S.Y., and Ma Y., 2004, An plant expression vector pBinETR1 of ethylene unsusceptivity and application, China Patent, ZL02126837.1



 



Holton T.A., 1996, Transgenic plants exhibiting altered flower color and methods for producing same, United States Patent, US006080920A


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