Introducing BMC Ecology and Evolution’s new Collection: Evolutionary Biology and Ecology of Cancer

BMC Ecology and Evolution warmly welcomes submissions to its new Collection on the 'Evolutionary Biology and Ecology of Cancer'.

BMC Ecology and Evolution welcomes submissions of experimental, mathematical and conceptual articles applying the knowledge, methods and concepts of evolution and ecology to help further our understanding of cancer and its management.

The Collection will consider manuscripts using evolutionary biology and ecology principles to:

  • Understand the natural history of the disease
  • Analyse and integrate the multilevel evolutionary processes and selection pressures
  • Identify the knowns and unknowns when mapping cellular (epi)genotypes to clinical phenotypes
  • Study tumour microenvironments
  • Infer (epi)genetic cellular branching processes resulting in distinct cancer cell lineages
  • Study transmissible and infectious cancers
  • Study molecular and cellular competition, cooperation and conflict
  • Study the emergence and spread of therapeutic resistance
  • Study the role of stochasticity and molecular-cellular noise in the establishment and evolution of the disease

The aim is to foster cross-talk between eco-evolutionary and oncology perspectives to advance our understanding of cancer.

Meet the Guest Editor

Ignacio González Bravo, CNRS Montpellier

Dr Ignacio González Bravo is a biochemist by training with a PhD in molecular microbiology studying the evolution of bacterial polysialic capsules. Ignacio was introduced to cancer research during his postdoc years at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg, working on the emergence and function of viral oncogenes. Ignacio later worked on the interface between cancer epidemiology and viral diversity and evolution, first as the head of the Infections and Cancer Laboratory at the Catalan Institute of Oncology and now as Research Director at the French National Center for Scientific Research in Montpellier. Ignacio uses viral induced-cancers as an experimental model. His main research program advocates for the introduction of evolutionary thinking as a central element in understanding the proximate and ultimate origins of cancer: from molecular mechanisms and functions to adaptation, from the natural history of the infection in the patient to the evolution of cancer susceptibility across species.

Submission guidelines

This Collection will consider researchdatabase and software articlesReview articles will be considered at the discretion of the Journal’s Editor. If you would like to submit a review article, please first email Jennifer Harman <jennifer.harman@springernature.com> – the Editor of BMC Ecology and Evolution. Please note that unsolicited reviews will not be considered as per our submission guidelines.

Datasets, descriptions and short reports relevant to the Collection will be considered by BMC Research Notes as data or research notes. This type of content will be published in BMC Research Notes and included in the final collection.

Articles under consideration for publication within the collection will be assessed according to the standard BMC Ecology and Evolution editorial criteria and will undergo the journal’s standard peer-review process overseen by Guest Editor Dr Ignacio González Bravo (CNRS Montpellier, France).

Before submitting your manuscript, please ensure you have carefully read the submission guidelines for BMC Ecology and Evolution. Please ensure you highlight in your cover letter that you are submitting to a collection and select the collection in the submission questionnaire in Editorial Manager.

If accepted for publication, an article processing charge applies. Please click here to find out about our standard waiver policy.

The Collection opens on Wednesday the 19th of October 2022 and closes on Friday the 18th of October 2023.

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