Biochemistry: An Indian Journal
Overview
Biochemistry: An Indian Journal, founded in 2007, is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal that welcomes manuscripts that seek to understand the molecular and cellular basis of biological processes.
It is a quarterly journal that accepts original research articles, review articles, case reports, short communications, and letters to the editor.
Papers published in our Journal may thus fall under the areas of not only biological chemistry, chemical biology, or biochemistry, but also allied disciplines such as systems biology, RNA biology, microbiology, neurobiology, epigenetics, computational biology, Chemical makeup of living matter, Advanced biochemistry, Biochemical processes, Genetic factors, Plant biochemistry, Amino acids & protein series, Protein structure & function, Enzyme kinetics, Coenzymes, Lipids, and Membranes.
Highlights from the Journal
ELISA, Flow cytometry, Molecular Biology, Plant Biochemistry, NMR spectroscopy, Genetic engineering, Enzymatic chemistry, Electron microscopy, Molecular Chemistry, Homology modeling, X-ray crystallography, Biochemical Reactions, Antibacterial activity of compounds, Coimmunoprecipitation, Polymerase chain reaction, Metabolism and hormones, Replication and DNA repair, Chromatography, and Isotope Translation: Protein Synthesis, Recombinant DNA technology, Transcription & RNA processing, Electron transport & ATP synthesis.
- ELISA: It is an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique used to detect and quantify antibodies, hormones, peptides, and proteins in the blood. Antibodies are proteins in the blood that are produced in response to an antigen. It aids in determining the presence of antibodies in the body in the case of certain infectious diseases. ELISA differs from other antibody assays in that it generates quantitative results and distinguishes between non-specific and specific interactions that occur through serial binding to solid surfaces, typically a polystyrene multi-well plate.
- Polymerase Chain Reaction: The ability of DNA polymerase to synthesize a new strand of DNA complementary to the offered template strand is used in PCR. Because DNA polymerase can only add a nucleotide to a previously formed 3′-OH group, it requires a primer to which it can add the first nucleotide. This requirement allows the researcher to define a specific region of the template sequence that he or she wishes to amplify. The specific sequence will be accumulated in billions of copies at the end of the PCR reaction.
- Recombinant DNA Technology: It entails modifying genetic material outside of an organism in order to obtain enhanced and desired properties in living organisms or as their products. This technology involves inserting DNA fragments from various sources with the desired gene sequence into an appropriate vector.
- Coimmunoprecipitation: If antibodies against the proteins of interest are available, coimmunoprecipitation (coIP) is the most straightforward technique for studying protein-protein interactions in vivo. To perform coIP, an antibody against a target protein is first coupled to Sepharose beads via protein A or G, and then complexes containing the target protein are centrifuged and immunoprecipitated with the antibody-coupled beads. Western blotting is used to visualize protein components in complexes using antibodies specific to the different components.
- Chromatography: Chromatography is a method of separation in which the analyte is mixed with a liquid or gaseous mobile phase that is pumped through a stationary phase. One phase is usually hydrophilic, while the other is lipophilic. The analyte components interact differently with these two phases. They spend more or less time interacting with the stationary phase depending on their polarity and are thus retarded to varying degrees. This results in the separation of the various components present in the sample. Each sample component elutes from the stationary phase at a different time, which is referred to as the retention time. The components’ signals are recorded and plotted in the form of a chromatogram as they pass through the detector.
Advantages
- Our journal accepts and publishes manuscripts within 21-24 days of receipt.
- Special membership offers are available for developed, developing, and low-income countries.
- Opportunity to speak at our global conferences with no registration fees.
- Following publication, you will receive free E-Prints and publication certificates.
Indexing
Euro Pub, Secret Search Engine Labs, Cosmos IF, CiteFactor, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Open J Gate, Google Scholar, CASS.
Steps for Article Submission
Our Open Access relies on Trade Science Inc.’s online manuscript submission, review, and tracking systems to ensure high-quality and timely review processing. For the quality review process, Trade Science Inc. employs the Online Review and Editorial Manager System. The Editorial Tracking System is a manuscript submission and review system that allows authors to submit manuscripts and track their progress online. Reviewers can access manuscripts and provide feedback. Editors can oversee the entire submission/review/revision/publishing process. Publishers can see which manuscripts are waiting to be published. When significant events occur, E-mail is automatically sent to those who need to know.
Submit your manuscripts via the online link: https://www.scholarscentral.org/submissions/biochemistry-an-indian-journal.html
Email: biochemistry@theresearchpub.com
Whatsapp: +44-7915-64-1605.