Biological Chemistry
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Editor-in-Chief:
Douglas D. Thomas
Douglas D. ThomasSearch for this author in:
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Edited by:
Johannes Buchner
Johannes BuchnerSearch for this author in:Johannes HerrmannSearch for this author in:Ming LeiSearch for this author in:Stephan LudwigSearch for this author in:Boris TurkSearch for this author in:
About this journal
Objective
Starting 2025, Biological Chemistry will be transferred to Diamond Open Access on a year-by-year basis. All articles will thus appear without delay under the Creative Commons license CC-BY. There will be no publication costs for the authors. The Open Access transformation is based on Subscribe-to-Open. You can find more information about the model here.
Biological Chemistry keeps you up-to-date with all new developments in the molecular life sciences. In addition to original research reports, authoritative reviews written by leading researchers in the field keep you informed about the latest advances in the molecular life sciences. Rapid, yet rigorous reviewing ensures fast access to recent research results of exceptional significance in the biological sciences.
Topics
- general biochemistry
- pathobiochemistry
- structural biology
- molecular and cellular biology
- genetics and epigenetics
- molecular medicine
- cancer research
- virology
- immunology
- plant molecular biology and biochemistry
- novel experimental methodologies
Article formats
Research Articles, Short Communications, Reviews and Minireviews
Reviews are published by invitation only, but suggestions to the Editor-in-Chief are welcome.
The journal is associated with the German Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (GBM).
Your Benefits
- Cutting-edge research results in molecular life sciences
- High quality peer-review
- Rapid online ahead-of-print publication
- Original research as well as review articles
History
Who was Felix Hoppe-Seyler?
Felix Hoppe-Seyler (1825-1895) - A pioneer of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Adapted from an Editorial which appeared in the August 1995 issue of Biological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler.
Felix Hoppe-SeylerErnst Felix Immanuel Hoppe, his name at birth, was born in Freyburg, a small town in central Germany, on December 26, 1825. He was orphaned early on and was taken in by the family of an elder sister. In 1864 he added their family name, Seyler, to his own in a gesture of gratitude and on the occasion of his official adoption.In 1846, the year in which he completed his secondary education, he began his medical studies in Halle which he later continued in Leipzig and Berlin. His intense, and for that time, unusual interest in the physiochemical aspects of medicine, encouraged by meetings with many scientists during the course of his studies, was reflected in his doctoral dissertation on the chemical and histological aspects of cartilage structure. This interest may have contributed to the dissatisfaction he felt in the role of a practical physician, an occupation he began in Berlin in 1852. He applied for a position as a researcher at the University of Greifswald just two years later. After habilitating there in 1855, he accepted Rudolf Virchow's offer in 1856 to direct the chemical laboratories in the newly founded Pathological Institute of the Berlin Charité. Felix Hoppe-Seyler married Agnes Maria Borstein in Berlin in 1858. They later had two children. In 1860, he accepted a professorship at the University of Tübingen, a seat previously held by Julius Eugen Schloßberger, one of the most prominent German physiological chemists of the time. Much of Felix Hoppe-Seyler's most famous research was performed during this period in Tübingen up to 1871, including reports regarding the chemical and optical characteristics of haemoglobin. This work is discussed in a Guest Editorial of the August 1995 issue of Biological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler written by Max Perutz (MRC Cambridge), whose ground-breaking studies on haemoglobin earned him the Nobel Prize.
In 1872, Felix Hoppe-Seyler accepted a professorship at the University of Strasbourg which, as a consequence of the Franco-German War of 1870/71, was within German borders. He was appointed rector of the University just one year later. From the very beginning of his time in Strasbourg, he strived to create an environment suitable for broadly oriented physiological chemical research. Memories of earlier, cramped conditions (he shared his work space at Greifswald with the skeleton of a whale) may have added impetus to his quest for adequate space. The result was the founding of the first independent Institute for Physiological Chemistry within the borders of Germany at that time, which was inaugurated in 1884. A few years earlier, in 1877, Felix Hoppe-Seyler made another important contribution to the recognition of physiological chemistry as an independent academic discipline with the founding of the Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie which now bears his name as Biological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler.
Despite the very tense Franco-German relationship at the time, Felix Hoppe-Seyler was elected corresponding member of the French Academy of Sciences, which, more than anything else, reflects his international reputation as an enthusiastic promoter of science. He also nurtured ties with Great Britain as is illustrated by his correspondence with Ernest Rutherford. His lab staff was at times an unusual blend of scientists from various countries. Felix Hoppe-Seyler passed away at the height of his scientific career on August 10, 1895 after suffering a heart attack during a stay at his country home in Wasserburg at Lake Constance.
Felix Hoppe-Seyler pursued a wide range of subjects during the course of his scientific career. Along with the previously mentioned research on globins and the investigation of fermentation and oxidation processes, subjects to which he was especially devoted, he also investigated bile acids, lipid metabolism, quantification and classification of proteins and urine components. He also inspired research on nucleic acids which led to the isolation and chemical characterisation of DNA by his students Friedrich Miescher and Albrecht Kossel. Among Felix Hoppe-Seyler's enduring achievements was his early recognition of the importance of the chemical characterisation of biological structures and processes in medicine and his significannt contributions to the founding of a new area of research based thereupon. Felix Hoppe-Seyler was one of the pioneers of modern biochemistry and molecular biology.
Mario Noyer-Weidner, Berlin
Walter Schaffner, Zürich
Previous Titles
Hoppe-Seyler’s Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie (1896-1984)
Biological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler (1985-1996)
Biological Chemistry (1996-present)
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Open AccessManipulating mitochondrial gene expressionSeptember 15, 2025
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Open AccessConserved function, divergent evolution: mitochondrial outer membrane insertases across eukaryotesAugust 11, 2025
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June 24, 2025
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedRetraction Note to the article: “EDD1 predicts prognosis and regulates gastric cancer growth in vitro and in vivo via miR-22“LicensedSeptember 1, 2016
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedEDD1 predicts prognosis and regulates gastric cancer growth in vitro and in vivo via miR-22LicensedApril 28, 2016
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedRetraction Note to the article “Up-regulation of miR-125b reverses epithelial-mesenchymal transition in paclitaxel-resistant lung cancer cellsLicensedNovember 17, 2015
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Requires Authentication UnlicensedUp-regulation of miR-125b reverses epithelial-mesenchymal transition in paclitaxel-resistant lung cancer cellsLicensedAugust 20, 2015
Call for Papers
Supplementary Materials
Journal Impact Factor | 2.4 | 2024, Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate, 2025) |
5-year Journal Impact Factor | 3.2 | 2024, Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate, 2025) |
Journal Citation Indicator | 0.42 | 2024, Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate, 2025) |
CiteScore | 7.0 | 2024, Scopus (Elsevier B.V., 2025) |
SCImago Journal Rank | 1.117 | 2024, SJR (Scimago Lab, 2025; Data Source: Scopus) |
Source Normalized Impact per Paper | 0.751 | 2024, CWTS Journal Indicators (CWTS B.V., 2025; Data Source: Scopus) |
Submission
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Open Access
Until the end of 2024 in this journal, authors have the option to publish their article under an open access license. Open Access allows you as an author to retain copyright and share your findings with colleagues and interested parties worldwide without any restraints. Please note that authors from institutions with which we have a transformative agreement can publish open access without paying an article processing charge (APC). More information on the eligible institutions and articles can be found under the "Funding and Support" tab here.
Starting 2025, Biological Chemistry will be transferred to Diamond Open Access on a year-by-year basis. All articles will thus immediately appear under the Creative Commons license CC-BY. There will be no publication costs for the authors. The Open Access transformation is based on Subscribe-to-Open, an alternative model that enables the full Open Access transformation of journals through the continuation of existing subscriptions. The prerequisite for successful transformation is that subscriptions are continued to the same extent as before. The editors of Biological Chemistry and the publisher De Gruyter would therefore like to thank all subscribers for their support, which has made the transformation to Open Access possible.
Editor-in-Chief
Prof. Dr. Douglas D. Thomas, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Pharmacy, USA
Executive Editors
Prof. Dr. Johannes Buchner, Lehrstuhl für Biotechnologie, Technische Universität München, Germany
Prof. Dr. Johannes Herrmann, Zellbiologie, Universität Kaiserslautern, Germany
Prof. Dr. Ming Lei, Key laboratory of Cell Differentiation and Apoptosis of the Chinese Ministry of Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, China
Prof. Dr. Stephan Ludwig, Institut für Molekular Virologie, Universitätsklinikum Münster, Gemany
Prof. Dr. Boris Turk, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Jozef Sefan Institute, Slovenia
Editorial Board
Prof. Dr. Patrizia Agostinis, Laboratory of Cell Death Research & Therapy, Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Leuven, Belgium
Prof. Dr. Lawrence Banks, International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Italy
Prof. Dr. Annette G. Beck-Sickinger , Institut für Biochemie, Universität Leipzig, Germany
Prof. Dr. Lisardo Boscá Gomar, Department of Metabolism and Cell Signaling, Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas "Alberto Sols" CSIC-UAM, Spain
Prof. Dr.Bernhard Brüne, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-Universität Fachbereich Medizin, Biochemie I (Pathobiochemie), Germany
Prof. Dr. Enrique Cadenas, Department of Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Southern California, USA
Prof. Dr. Hong Cheng, Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, China
Prof. Dr. Oliver Daumke, Laboratory Structural Biology of Membrane-Associated Processes, Max-Delbrück-Centrum für Molekulare Medizin, Germany
Prof. Dr. Ivan Dikic, Institut für Biochemie II, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe Universität, Germany
Prof. Dr. Wen-Xing Ding, Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology and Therapeutic, The University of Kansas Medical Center, USA
Prof. Dr. Nelson Gekara, Department of Molecular Biosciences, Wenner-Gren Institute, Sweden
Prof. Dr. Dieter Häussinger, Klinik für Gastroenterologie, Hepatologie, Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik, Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
Prof. Dr. Lars-Oliver Klotz, Lehrstuhl für Nutrigenomik, Institut für Ernährungswissenschaften, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany
Prof. Dr. Viktor Magdolen, Frauenklinik der TU München, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Germany
Prof. Dr. Markus Müschen, Yale University, Center of Molecular and Cellular Oncology, US
Prof. Dr. Gunnar Pejler, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, Sweden
Prof. Dr. Nikolaus Pfanner, Institut für Biochemie und Molekularbiologie, Universität Freiburg , Germany
Prof. Dr. Jan Potempa, Deptartment of Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Molecular Biology, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Prof. Dr. Rina Rosenzweig, Department of Chemical and Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science , Israel
Prof. Dr. Konrad Sandhoff, LIMES, c/o Kekulé-Institut für Organische Chemie & Biochemie, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, Germany
Prof. Dr. Jürgen Scheller, Institut f. Biochemie & Molekularbiologie II, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
Prof. Dr. Helmut Sies, Institut für Biochemie & Molekularbiologie I, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
Prof. Dr. Konstanze F. Winklhofer, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Institute of Biochemistry and Pathobiochemistry, Medical Faculty Ruhr-Universität , Germany
Associate Editors
Prof. Dr.Jörg-Walter Bartsch, Universitätsklinikum Marburg, Labor der Klinik für Neurochirurgie, Germany
Prof. Dr. Stephan Clemens, Universität Bayreuth, LS Pflanzenphysiologie, Germany
Dr. Antje Ebert, Universitätsmedizin Göttingen, Herzforschungszentrum, Department Kardiologie und Pneumologie, Germany
Prof. Dr. Ralf Erdmann, Universität Bochum, Biochemie & Pathobiochemie/Systembiochemie, Germany
Prof. Dr. Eric Geertsma, MPI für Molekulare Zellbiologie und Genetik, Dresden, Germany
Prof. Dr. Klaudia Giehl, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, Signaltransduktion zellulärer Motilität, Germany
Prof. Dr. Silke Härteis, LS Molekulare und Zelluläre Anatomie, Universität Regensburg, Germany
Prof. Dr. Sven Heiles, ISAS e.V., Dortmund, Germany
Prof. Dr. Ute Hellmich, Organische und Makromolekulare Chemie, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany
Prof. Dr. Birte Höcker, Abt. Biochemie, Universität Bayreuth, Germany
Prof. Dr. Ina Koch, Institute for Computer Science, Faculty of Computer Science and Mathematics, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, WG Bioinformatics, Germany
PD Dr. Martina Mühlenhoff, Klinische Biochemie, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Germany
Prof. Dr. Marc Nowaczyk, Institut für Biowissenschaften, Universität Rostock, Germany
Prof. Dr. Cristina Paulino, Biochemiezentrum, Universität Heidelberg, Germany
Prof. Dr. Tassula Proikas-Cezanne, Universität Tübingen, Interfakultäres Institut für Zellbiologie, Germany
Prof. Dr. Jan Riemer, Biochemie, Universität Köln, Germany
Prof. Dr. Claus Seidel, Universität Düsseldorf, LS für Molekulare Physikalische Chemie, Germany
Prof. Dr. Julia Weigand, Pharmazeutische Chemie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany
Prof. Dr. Matias Zurbriggen, Institut für Synthetische Biologie, Universität Düsseldorf, Germany
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