Aims and Scope

 

Journal of Biotechnology Research Center (JOBRC)

Aims

The Journal of Biotechnology Research Center (JOBRC) is an international, peer-reviewed journal committed to publishing high-impact, conceptually novel, and mechanistically insightful research across the full spectrum of biotechnology and life sciences.

The journal seeks to:

- Publish studies that deliver substantial advances in biological understanding or technological innovation

- Bridge fundamental biology with translational and industrial applications

- Promote interdisciplinary research integrating molecular, computational, and systems-level approaches

- Advance solutions to global challenges including human health, food security, and environmental sustainability

- Ensure dissemination of rigorous, reproducible, and ethically conducted research

Scope

JOBRC welcomes submissions that provide deep mechanistic insight, technological innovation, or translational relevance in:

  1. Advanced Biotechnology

- Synthetic biology and metabolic engineering

- Genome editing technologies (e.g., CRISPR)

- Biopharmaceutical development and precision medicine

- Industrial and environmental biotechnology

- Nanobiotechnology and bioengineering

  1. Molecular and Cellular Systems

- Molecular biology and gene regulation

- Functional genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics

- Systems biology and network modeling

- Epigenetics and RNA biology

  1. Microbial and Host Interactions

- Microbiome and host–microbe interactions

- Pathogenesis and immune responses

- Antimicrobial resistance

- Microbial biotechnology

  1. Computational Biology

- Bioinformatics and AI-driven biology

- Computational modeling

- Data-driven biotechnology

Editorial Standards

Manuscripts must:

- Demonstrate clear conceptual novelty

- Provide mechanistic depth

- Include robust experimental design and statistics

- Ensure reproducibility and transparency

- Show broad scientific relevance

Article Types

- Original Research Articles

- Review Articles

- Short Communications

- Methods Papers

Out of Scope

- Incremental or low-novelty studies

- Purely descriptive work

- Weak methodology or statistics