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Journal of Biological Chemistry



Journal of Biological Chemistry
Abbreviated title J Biol Chem, JBC
Discipline Biochemistry, molecular biology
Language English
Edited by Herbert Tabor
Publication details
Publisher The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (USA)
Publication history 1905 to present
Indexing
ISSN 0021-9258 (print)
1083-351X (web)
Links
  • Journal homepage

The Journal of Biological Chemistry (often abbreviated JBC) is a scientific journal founded in 1905 and published since 1925 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. It publishes research in any area of biochemistry or molecular biology, both in print and online, weekly. The Editor is Herbert Tabor. All its articles are available for free on its website. The impact factor of the journal in 2005 was 5.854.[1] In 2005 JBC was the scientific journal that received the largest total number of citations.

Contents

Founding

The journal was founded in 1905 by John Jacob Abel and Christian Archibald Herter, who also served as the first editors. They sent letters to 21 other American biochemists, inviting them to join the founding editorial board. This founding board (which eventually numbered 22 in addition to Abel and Herter), consisted of: R. H. Chittenden, Otto Folin, William J. Gies, Reid Hunt, Walter Jones, J. H. Kastle, Waldemar Koch, P. A. Levene, Jacques Loeb, Graham Lusk, A. B. Macallum, J. J. R. Macleod, A. P. Mathews, L. B. Mendel, F. G. Novy, W. R. Orndorff, T. B. Osborne, Franz Pfaff, A. E. Taylor, V. C. Vaughan, A. J. Wakeman, H. L. Wheeler.

The first issue appeared in October 1905.

Editors

  • 1906-1909 - John Jacob Abel and Christian Archibald Herter
  • 1909-1910 - Christian Archibald Herter[2]
  • 1910-1914 - Alfred Newton Richards
  • 1914-1925 - Donald D. Van Slyke
  • 1925-1936 - Stanley R. Benedict[3]
  • 1937-1958 - Rudolph J. Anderson
  • 1958-1967 - John T. Edsall
  • 1968-1971 - William Howard Stein[4]
  • 1971-present - Herbert Tabor

Publishing history

Other people associated with the journal included Henry Drysdale Dakin, E. V. McCollum, Hans Thacher Clarke, Konrad Emil Bloch, Efraim Racker, and Mildred Cohn. The location of the journal's editorial offices has included Cornell Medical College (until 1937), Yale University (1937-1958), Harvard University (1958-1967), and New York (from 1967). In 1958 the format of the journal changed to a larger size with a layout of two columns.

References

  1. ^ Journal Citation Reports, 2006
  2. ^ Died in office.
  3. ^ Died in office. John T. Edsall served as temporary editor until the next editor was appointed.
  4. ^ Disabled by severe illness in 1969, but did not resign until 1971.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Journal_of_Biological_Chemistry". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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