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A system for success: BMC Systems Biology, a new open access journal

Abstract

BMC Systems Biology is the first open access journal spanning the growing field of systems biology from molecules up to ecosystems. The journal has launched as more and more institutes are founded that are similarly dedicated to this new approach. BMC Systems Biology builds on the ongoing success of the BMC series, providing a venue for all sound research in the systems-level analysis of biology.

The BMC series – building on success

When the open access publisher BioMed Central launched the BMC series of journals in May 2000, it provided a venue for open access to research covering a wide range of research fields in biology and medicine [1] and the imperative to allow the free flow of scientific ideas [2]. The BMC series was one initiative from BioMed Central in response to recognizing that the quantity of results and data being generated was too much for conventional systems of publication to deal with. We needed a system that was open and allowed data, results, and interpretations to flow freely, be checked and stamped with authority, but also to be freely mined using computational tools.

The aim was to create a resource of scientific research that was freely available online, including for download and reuse – that is, open access. Open Access is more than just being free online – it also means being permanently archived in a public and accessible archive, and being freely distributable and reusable [3].

The BMC series has met that aim, and has proven to be highly successful both when measured by quantity – submissions have roughly doubled every 18 months, interestingly very much in line with Moore's law for computing [4] – and when measured by quality. The Impact Factor from Thomson Scientific (ISI) [5], although much criticised [6, 7], is the most widely used metric for the "importance" of the results published in a journal [8]. Judging by the number of journals in the BMC series that have received good Impact Factors, such as BMC Bioinformatics [9], BMC Cancer, BMC Evolutionary Biology and BMC Genomics [10, 11], the research published in these journals is certainly proving to be important and citable. Together with the other journals published by BioMed Central such as Breast Cancer Research, Genome Biology and Journal of Biology, the BMC series has proven that open access works.

We don't, however, want to rest on our laurels. In the last few years we have launched new BMC journals to address gaps in the series' coverage. BMC Biology and BMC Medicine launched at the end of 2003 to provide an outlet for high quality research of broad interest beyond a single discipline [12]. In response to a growing number of enquiries from veterinarians looking for an open access journal in their field, we also launched BMC Veterinary Research in 2005 [13].

BMC Systems Biology – a new journal, in a new field

There has been another gap that has become evident in the biology journals. Studies were beginning to appear that seemed too expansive to fit the scope of our existing journals, encompassing but not contained within bioinformatics or genomics, nor biochemistry or physiology. That gap was systems biology, and we've now filled it.

There has been a rapid growth in the use of the term 'systems biology' in the literature as this new field emerges (see Figure 1). The field is in fact truly 'emergent' (a popular concept in systems biology [14]), arising as it does out of a combination of high-throughput techniques (epitomised by the microarray) along with the mathematical modelling that is made possible by computing power that would once have been housed within aircraft hangers and now sits upon a desktop.

Figure 1
figure 1

The growth of the use of the term 'systems biology' over the last ten years. (a) Number of references to 'systems biology' in PubMed abstracts per year since 1997. (b) Number of references to 'systems biology' in full text articles in Google Scholar per year since 1997.

So what is it?

Systems biology has been defined many times [15–17]. However, the essence of systems biology is probably encapsulated within several concepts:

• Viewing biological systems as a whole, rather than solely in terms of their component parts;

• Mathematical modelling;

• Iterative analysis, with experimental data informing models, which in turn refine the experiments;

• Moving between and integrating systems at different scales – from atoms up to ecosystems;

• Interdisciplinary collaboration between researchers from diverse subject areas, both within biology (including physiologists, developmental biologists, evolutionary scientists, neuroscientists, cell biologists, genomicists to name but some), and beyond biology (drawing in mathematicians, physicists, computer scientists, and social scientists).

Systems biology is a new way of approaching the investigation of biology. Dedicated systems biology institutes have sprung up all over the world: pioneering Japanese and American institutes (The Systems Biology Institute in Tokyo [18], and the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle [19], both founded in 2000), are now being joined by fledging Systems Biology institutes such as the first new department at Harvard for two decades [20], and the new BBSRC-funded centres for integrative systems biology recently established in Edinburgh, London, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham and Oxford [21].

The story so far

The first articles published in BMC Systems Biology include work from Editorial Board member Douglas Lauffenburger concerning the use of decision trees to predict of the behaviour of fibroblasts [22], the identification of functional modules from Ron Shamir [23], and the latest software for analyzing metabolic, regulatory and signalling networks from Ernst Gilles [24]. Our international Editorial Board has provided vital support and guidance to ensure the rigorous review of all submitted manuscripts [25]. Between them, the first ten articles were accessed over 7,000 times in the first month of publication, and the ten most viewed articles have together been viewed by more than 20,000 readers [26].

Conclusion

If you are a researcher exploring this new frontier of biology, we encourage you to consider submitting to BMC Systems Biology, even if you do not think of yourself as a 'system biologist'. You may be a neuroscientist, a physiologist or an ecologist, but if you are applying the key features of modelling and integration, we want to hear from you. While the focus of the journal is upon original research, we are also keen to publish commentaries that explore the expanding boundaries of the field of systems biology and suggest new opportunities for collaboration between disciplines, such as Nicolas Le Novère's exploration of the journey towards a systems biology of neuroscience over the last half century [27].

Nicholas Rajewsky, a member of our Editorial Board, said in summing up the launch of our new journal, "The BMC journals have already proven to be very attractive to many scientists and readers. These journals provide open access, do not restrict manuscript length, and do not insist on publishing only 'major' findings, that is, they do not force scientists to strive for 'sensations'. Especially in a new field, such as systems biology, it is necessary to work on solid methodology development. Therefore, BMC Systems Biology seems especially suited to become an important and high impact journal" [28]. We couldn't agree more.

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Acknowledgements

Our thanks to Elizabeth Moylan and Matt Cockerill for their suggestions for this editorial.

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Correspondence to Matt J Hodgkinson.

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Hodgkinson, M.J., Webb, P.A. A system for success: BMC Systems Biology, a new open access journal. BMC Syst Biol 1, 41 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-1-41

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