Justin Crocker
@justinmcrocker.bsky.social
Biologist studying evolution, development, and gene-regulation. Group leader at EMBL, Heidelberg. Climber.
Reposted by Justin Crocker
I am very excited to announce the opening of the submission site for the upcoming Conférences Jacques Monod on Developmental Biology, May 18-22, 2026 cjm.sb-roscoff.fr/en/conferenc...
@lionlchristiaen.bsky.social and I have an exciting program of speakers and slots for selected short talks, etc.
@lionlchristiaen.bsky.social and I have an exciting program of speakers and slots for selected short talks, etc.
October 23, 2025 at 12:49 PM
I am very excited to announce the opening of the submission site for the upcoming Conférences Jacques Monod on Developmental Biology, May 18-22, 2026 cjm.sb-roscoff.fr/en/conferenc...
@lionlchristiaen.bsky.social and I have an exciting program of speakers and slots for selected short talks, etc.
@lionlchristiaen.bsky.social and I have an exciting program of speakers and slots for selected short talks, etc.
Reposted by Justin Crocker
If you’re applying to your dream lab for an internship/PhD/postdoc, always send a second email 1-2 weeks after the first one if you don’t hear back.
I promise we will be grateful rather than annoyed. My email inbox is a disaster and I’m quite junior - and very few of us have secretarial support
I promise we will be grateful rather than annoyed. My email inbox is a disaster and I’m quite junior - and very few of us have secretarial support
October 4, 2025 at 5:47 AM
If you’re applying to your dream lab for an internship/PhD/postdoc, always send a second email 1-2 weeks after the first one if you don’t hear back.
I promise we will be grateful rather than annoyed. My email inbox is a disaster and I’m quite junior - and very few of us have secretarial support
I promise we will be grateful rather than annoyed. My email inbox is a disaster and I’m quite junior - and very few of us have secretarial support
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Check out our new preprint on the evolution of enhancer loss. Turns out there are 50 ways to lose a function. We found four of them.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Distinct mechanisms decommission redundant enhancers to facilitate phenotypic evolution
The evolutionary loss of morphological traits is often driven by changes in gene regulation. Many developmental genes are controlled by multiple, redundant enhancers, raising the question of how robus...
www.biorxiv.org
October 28, 2025 at 8:06 PM
Check out our new preprint on the evolution of enhancer loss. Turns out there are 50 ways to lose a function. We found four of them.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
After all these years, It eventually got the frame it deserves. Respect 🪰
October 28, 2025 at 8:03 PM
After all these years, It eventually got the frame it deserves. Respect 🪰
Reposted by Justin Crocker
October 12, 2025 at 9:25 AM
Reposted by Justin Crocker
A good day to remember John Gurdon’s school report from his biology master at Eton
October 7, 2025 at 8:45 PM
A good day to remember John Gurdon’s school report from his biology master at Eton
Reposted by Justin Crocker
The DB unit also celebrated Anne Ephrussi at this wonderful symposium! Anne was our unit head from 2007-2021. Congratulations on a remarkable career, Anne! 🎉
October 2, 2025 at 8:49 AM
The DB unit also celebrated Anne Ephrussi at this wonderful symposium! Anne was our unit head from 2007-2021. Congratulations on a remarkable career, Anne! 🎉
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Congrats to my friends in the Boettiger lab for this really beautiful live imaging work. A big leap forward in understanding the dynamic side of genome organization. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Kinetic organization of the genome revealed by ultraresolution multiscale live imaging
Genome function requires regulated genome motion. However, tools to directly observe this motion in vivo have been limited in coverage and resolution. Here we introduce an approach to tile mammalian c...
www.science.org
September 19, 2025 at 6:20 AM
Congrats to my friends in the Boettiger lab for this really beautiful live imaging work. A big leap forward in understanding the dynamic side of genome organization. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Very proud of our paper on "scrambling-by-hopping" LADs, which was just published: www.nature.com/articles/s41.... Congrats to Lise Dauban and the rest of the team – this was a real tour-de-force!
September 2, 2025 at 5:26 PM
Very proud of our paper on "scrambling-by-hopping" LADs, which was just published: www.nature.com/articles/s41.... Congrats to Lise Dauban and the rest of the team – this was a real tour-de-force!
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Functional maps of a genomic locus reveal confinement of an enhancer by its target gene by the @basvansteensellab.bsky.social
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Functional maps of a genomic locus reveal confinement of an enhancer by its target gene
Genes are often activated by enhancers located at large genomic distances, and the importance of this positioning is poorly understood. By relocating promoter-reporter constructs into thousands of alt...
www.science.org
September 19, 2025 at 7:50 AM
Functional maps of a genomic locus reveal confinement of an enhancer by its target gene by the @basvansteensellab.bsky.social
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Very excited to see this work in press! I think there is a reason to believe that this is a common means of stabilizing large-effect polymorphisms in general and might be an important reason for why diploidy is so common. news.stanford.edu/stories/2025...
September 15, 2025 at 5:24 PM
Very excited to see this work in press! I think there is a reason to believe that this is a common means of stabilizing large-effect polymorphisms in general and might be an important reason for why diploidy is so common. news.stanford.edu/stories/2025...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Join this year's CSH Asia Systems Biology of Gene Regulation & Genome Editing meeting in beautiful Suzhou, China, Oct 20-24. Let's bring the international communities together! Abstract deadline Sept 19! Infos and registration at csh-asia.org?content/2767. Please repost!
September 11, 2025 at 6:09 AM
Join this year's CSH Asia Systems Biology of Gene Regulation & Genome Editing meeting in beautiful Suzhou, China, Oct 20-24. Let's bring the international communities together! Abstract deadline Sept 19! Infos and registration at csh-asia.org?content/2767. Please repost!
Reposted by Justin Crocker
‘Our Ancestors the Fish’, a course by Prof. @neilshubin.bsky.social, Univ of Chicago, invited Prof @college-de-france.fr. in Paris @psl-univ.bsky.social. Four conferences, free access, open to everyone, with Tiktaalik as a guest star. Friends, colleagues and fossils in Paris and around, please RT🥁
September 3, 2025 at 6:53 AM
‘Our Ancestors the Fish’, a course by Prof. @neilshubin.bsky.social, Univ of Chicago, invited Prof @college-de-france.fr. in Paris @psl-univ.bsky.social. Four conferences, free access, open to everyone, with Tiktaalik as a guest star. Friends, colleagues and fossils in Paris and around, please RT🥁
Reposted by Justin Crocker
On the new acting CDC director. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025...
August 29, 2025 at 1:59 AM
On the new acting CDC director. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
My lab cannot afford donating at the moment, so I donated privately. Even if you don’t work on flies we all owe so much to FlyBase. Consider donating, and importantly, let’s strive to make the more official funding bodies aware of how much is at stake.
August 27, 2025 at 8:07 AM
My lab cannot afford donating at the moment, so I donated privately. Even if you don’t work on flies we all owe so much to FlyBase. Consider donating, and importantly, let’s strive to make the more official funding bodies aware of how much is at stake.
Reposted by Justin Crocker
+1 here.
Reach us out early enough !
Getting funding and personal timelines aligned rarely happens over night !
Reach us out early enough !
Getting funding and personal timelines aligned rarely happens over night !
Final year PhD students, I know you’re desperately trying to finish experiments/revisions/submissions/write a thesis & just survive - but please spare a few minutes to apply to your dream postdoc labs.
It easily takes A YEAR from first contact, even if everything goes to plan on both sides.
It easily takes A YEAR from first contact, even if everything goes to plan on both sides.
August 27, 2025 at 10:46 AM
+1 here.
Reach us out early enough !
Getting funding and personal timelines aligned rarely happens over night !
Reach us out early enough !
Getting funding and personal timelines aligned rarely happens over night !
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Drosophila research without FlyBase would be untenable. Time for all labs who can afford it to step up.
A reminder you/your lab can support FlyBase at Cambridge through the following link. Every bit helps. Please share if you yourself can't donate.
www.philanthropy.cam.ac.uk/give-to-camb...
www.philanthropy.cam.ac.uk/give-to-camb...
August 14, 2025 at 8:04 PM
Drosophila research without FlyBase would be untenable. Time for all labs who can afford it to step up.
Reposted by Justin Crocker
A Summer reading recommendation: new primer in @dev-journal.bsky.social explains how dynamical systems theory unlocks the logic of developmental patterning
Everything from bistable switches & oscillators to phase portraits & more with Python code to explore
journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
Everything from bistable switches & oscillators to phase portraits & more with Python code to explore
journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
From genes to patterns: five key dynamical systems concepts to decode developmental regulatory mechanisms
Summary: Dynamical systems theory provides a powerful quantitative and intuitive framework to understand developmental processes. This Primer brings key concepts of this framework to the ever-growing ...
journals.biologists.com
August 4, 2025 at 8:44 AM
A Summer reading recommendation: new primer in @dev-journal.bsky.social explains how dynamical systems theory unlocks the logic of developmental patterning
Everything from bistable switches & oscillators to phase portraits & more with Python code to explore
journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
Everything from bistable switches & oscillators to phase portraits & more with Python code to explore
journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
🪰 Welcome to the EMBO Practical Course 'Drosophila genetics and genomics'! #EMBODrosophila
Participants will gain hands-on experience and insights from leading experts in the field – let the learning and collaboration begin! 🙌🏼
@embl.org @embo.org @justinmcrocker.bsky.social
Participants will gain hands-on experience and insights from leading experts in the field – let the learning and collaboration begin! 🙌🏼
@embl.org @embo.org @justinmcrocker.bsky.social
August 4, 2025 at 10:33 AM
🪰 Welcome to the EMBO Practical Course 'Drosophila genetics and genomics'! #EMBODrosophila
Participants will gain hands-on experience and insights from leading experts in the field – let the learning and collaboration begin! 🙌🏼
@embl.org @embo.org @justinmcrocker.bsky.social
Participants will gain hands-on experience and insights from leading experts in the field – let the learning and collaboration begin! 🙌🏼
@embl.org @embo.org @justinmcrocker.bsky.social
Reposted by Justin Crocker
#MetabolismMondays
Meet Anna Vigil, #PhD student in @justinmcrocker.bsky.social lab @embl.org @embldbunit.bsky.social, discussing her work on how #metabolism impacts cell fate, development & #evolution #Drosophila.
#theNodeCorrespondents #ecr @the-node.bsky.social #DevBio
Meet Anna Vigil, #PhD student in @justinmcrocker.bsky.social lab @embl.org @embldbunit.bsky.social, discussing her work on how #metabolism impacts cell fate, development & #evolution #Drosophila.
#theNodeCorrespondents #ecr @the-node.bsky.social #DevBio
Currents of Change: Metabolism shaping cell fate and evolution #MetabolismMondays - the Node
All the world's a metabolic dance, early career scientists are leading the way! Emerging perspectives in metabolism Anna-Lena Brigitte Gunda VigilPhD
thenode.biologists.com
July 15, 2025 at 2:28 AM
#MetabolismMondays
Meet Anna Vigil, #PhD student in @justinmcrocker.bsky.social lab @embl.org @embldbunit.bsky.social, discussing her work on how #metabolism impacts cell fate, development & #evolution #Drosophila.
#theNodeCorrespondents #ecr @the-node.bsky.social #DevBio
Meet Anna Vigil, #PhD student in @justinmcrocker.bsky.social lab @embl.org @embldbunit.bsky.social, discussing her work on how #metabolism impacts cell fate, development & #evolution #Drosophila.
#theNodeCorrespondents #ecr @the-node.bsky.social #DevBio
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Our paper describing the Range Extender element which is required and sufficient for long-range enhancer activation at the Shh locus is now available at @nature.com. Congrats to @gracebower.bsky.social who led the study. Below is a brief summary of the main findings www.nature.com/articles/s41... 1/
Range extender mediates long-distance enhancer activity - Nature
The REX element is associated with long-range enhancer–promoter interactions.
www.nature.com
July 2, 2025 at 4:17 PM
Our paper describing the Range Extender element which is required and sufficient for long-range enhancer activation at the Shh locus is now available at @nature.com. Congrats to @gracebower.bsky.social who led the study. Below is a brief summary of the main findings www.nature.com/articles/s41... 1/
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Getting the message across from a distance:
🧬REX🧬 is a “Range EXtender” element that can turn short-range into looooooooooooong-range enhancers
Great collaboration led by @gracebower.bsky.social and @evgenykvon.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
@biosci.lbl.gov @berkeleylab.lbl.gov
🧬REX🧬 is a “Range EXtender” element that can turn short-range into looooooooooooong-range enhancers
Great collaboration led by @gracebower.bsky.social and @evgenykvon.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
@biosci.lbl.gov @berkeleylab.lbl.gov
July 2, 2025 at 4:03 PM
Getting the message across from a distance:
🧬REX🧬 is a “Range EXtender” element that can turn short-range into looooooooooooong-range enhancers
Great collaboration led by @gracebower.bsky.social and @evgenykvon.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
@biosci.lbl.gov @berkeleylab.lbl.gov
🧬REX🧬 is a “Range EXtender” element that can turn short-range into looooooooooooong-range enhancers
Great collaboration led by @gracebower.bsky.social and @evgenykvon.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
@biosci.lbl.gov @berkeleylab.lbl.gov
Reposted by Justin Crocker
A decade of preprints in biology
How @biologists.bsky.social has championed preprint adoption since 2014
Launching preLights, supporting Review Commons & introducing In Preprints in @dev-journal.bsky.social
How @biologists.bsky.social has championed preprint adoption since 2014
Launching preLights, supporting Review Commons & introducing In Preprints in @dev-journal.bsky.social
Staying ahead of the curve: a decade of preprints in biology | Biology Open | The Company of Biologists https://journals.biologists.com/bio/article/14/6/bio062111/368433/Staying-ahead-of-the-curve-a-decade-of-preprints
Staying ahead of the curve: a decade of preprints in biology
When Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory announced the launch of bioRxiv in November 2013, only the braver or more radical amongst us would have predicted that it heralded a lasting change within the science publishing ecosystem. What started with a bold idea – an open access preprint repository for the biological sciences (see original news post) – resulted in a cultural change within the field, changing the way research is shared, reviewed and accessed. The emergence and expansion of preprint review platforms, funder policy changes and community advocacy for preprint adoption continues to support this change.The Company of Biologists was one of the earlier advocates among publishers for the integration of preprints into existing publishing workflows. Furthermore, through initiatives such as preLights, the Company pro-actively helps to amplify the reach and impact of preprints. This Editorial explores the transformation of the preprint landscape since 2013 and how the Company has adapted to and embraced this (new) way of sharing research.Whereas preprinting in the physical sciences has a much longer history (Tennant et al., 2018), the adoption of preprints in biology took a significant step forward in 2013. After a few unsuccessful attempts to start a preprint server that would encompass the life sciences (e.g. Nature Precedings in 2007), the successful launch of bioRxiv meant that life scientists now had a dedicated platform to rapidly share their findings (Sever et al., 2019a,b preprint). Of note, other preprint servers (e.g. PeerJ Preprints) or related platforms (e.g. F1000Research) were launched around the same time, offering researchers more options to share their work. The Center for Open Science launched the Open Science Framework (OSF) Preprints platform in 2016 to link preprint servers that were starting to appear across the scientific landscape (Tennant et al., 2018). bioRxiv quickly became the most popular preprint server for the biological sciences and only recently received competition from Research Square (the preprint server owned by Springer Nature) with regard to this title (see recent statistics collated by Europe PMC).When, in 2015, Ron Vale noted that it took University of California San Francisco (UCSF) graduates longer and longer to achieve a first-author publication, this inspired him to found the preprint-focused organisation titled Accelerating Science and Publication in Biology, better known as ASAPbio. This non-profit organisation has been instrumental in pushing the wider acceptance of preprints within the biological sciences. Today, ASAPbio continues to play a pivotal role in the preprint ecosystem, advocating for widespread changes (involving the adoption of preprints) that increase accessibility, inclusion and fairness.Prior to the launch of bioRxiv, The Company of Biologists journals' policies were incompatible with preprint posting. However, the Editors-in-Chief and Board of Directors quickly realised that bioRxiv, unlike previous attempts, was likely to gain traction – at least in some of our communities. In early 2014, Development and Biology Open began to welcome the submission of preprinted manuscripts. By the end of 2016, not only had all our journals introduced this policy, but we had also integrated with bioRxiv to enable bi-directional manuscript transfer between the two sites. It is noteworthy that different areas of the life sciences have embraced preprinting to different extents – with cell and developmental biologists being much more likely to post preprints than comparative physiologists (Nelson and Marshall, 2025). Adoption of preprint-related policies has therefore reflected the needs and wishes of the communities our journals serve.In line with the policy changes at The Company of Biologists, nearly half of publishers had developed preprint-related policies by 2017 (da Silva and Dobránszki, 2019). At this point, it was also becoming clear that researchers were increasingly finding bioRxiv (and other preprint servers) an invaluable resource for accessing the latest scientific findings. In response, our community site the Node (which serves the developmental biology field) began to collate monthly lists of relevant preprints – making it easier for researchers to find the content they were interested in. From an initial of just 20 preprints in June 2016, the monthly list now typically includes over 150 articles, and these posts on the Node are consistently among its most-read content. The popularity of these posts prompted the Company to consider other ways of helping the community to access and digest the preprint literature, leading to the birth of preLights – a preprint highlighting service that allows early-career researchers (ECRs) to highlight and discuss preprints that spark interest or debate in the scientific community (Brown and Pourquié, 2018; for more information about preLights, see Box 1). Box 1. preLights (2018 to now)Designed as a community-driven platform, supported by The Company of Biologists and a dedicated Community Manager, preLights allows early-career researchers (ECRs) to highlight and discuss preprints that are of interest to them as well as the wider biological community (Brown and Pourquié, 2018). A usual preLights post contains a summary of the key findings presented in the selected preprint, the reasons it was selected and the preLighter's thoughts on its significance. Inspired by a published study supported directly by the preLights community (Brierley et al., 2022), ‘postLights’ is a recently added feature that tracks how an article changed between the preprinted and published version. In addition, two-thirds of the >1600 preLights posts include a response from the preprint authors, making preLights a unique platform for encouraging discussion around preprints. This also is the main aim of its associated podcast series, ‘spotLights’. preLights is indexed on EuropePMC, bioRxiv, PubPeer and Sciety, and all posts receive a DOI. As such, it not only promotes the visibility of preprints but also supports ECRs in building their expertise, writing skills and networks.We weren't the only ones to realise that there was a need for collation and review of preprints; around the same time, several preprint review initiatives started to emerge – most notably PREreview and Peer Community In. These sites provide more formal peer review of preprints than preLights but – like preLights – there is a strong focus on involving ECRs and diversifying the pool of researchers that can contribute to the review of the scientific literature. Thus, a new community began to coalesce, led by ASAPbio, around the preprint ecosystem – involving researchers, publishers, funders and other relevant parties.Besides preprint review platforms, there was also a noticeable increase in so-called overlay journals. These journals combine the available preprint infrastructure (e.g. bioRxiv) with existing peer-review policies and journal structures (Rousi and Laakso, 2024). Within the biological sciences, a particularly prominent example of such a journal is JMIRx | Bio, which, rather than an overlay journal, defines itself as a ‘Superjournal’. Although journals like JMIRx | Bio could, in theory, bridge preprints and publishing workflow, it is interesting to note that, in practice, overlay journals have not gained significant traction to date.By 2018, the number of life science preprints was growing at a rate ten times faster than that for traditional journal articles (Levchenko et al., 2024). However, journal policies regarding preprints varied widely, and it was not always straightforward for authors to find out what they could do in the preprint space without compromising potential publication in their target journal. To address this issue, the Transpose database was launched in 2019 to provide more clarity on journal policies regarding preprinting peer review, co-reviewing, and preprint policies relating to media coverage, licensing, versions, citation and platforms (this database is no longer actively maintained, perhaps reflecting the fact that journal policies are now less divergent than previously).The success of bioRxiv meant that many publishers had to consider the degree to which the new culture of preprinting might threaten journal publishing or, conversely, how they could synergise with this ecosystem. Such discussions led to two major initiatives in the biological sciences – the launch of Review Commons, and the Preprint Review trial at eLife – which laid the groundwork for eLife’s current publishing model (see next section). Review Commons, launched by the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) in collaboration with ASAPbio, provides researchers with the option of receiving journal-independent, high-quality peer review of their preprints and/or manuscript prior to submission to a journal (Lemberger and Pulverer, 2019). The result of the Review Commons process would be a ‘Refereed Preprint’ comprising the manuscript, reviewer reports and any author responses to those reports. Initially, public posting of the refereed preprint was optional, but Review Commons now requires authors to post manuscripts as preprints first (see EMBO news post), and the peer reviews and author response are posted on the preprint server by default (as detailed in a Review Commons news post). What has remained the same since the launch of Review Commons is that the authors can choose to submit their work, along with the reviews and responses, to one of the affiliate journals, which use these evaluations to make informed decisions without restarting peer review (Lemberger and Pulverer, 2019). Of note, the journals of The Company of Biologists were among the initial 17 affiliate journals – a group that has now grown to 28.In response (and adding to) the evolving publishing landscape, two impactful papers appeared in PLOS Biology in 2019 that proposed extensive changes to the way scientific research is disseminated (Stern and O'Shea, 2019; Sever et al., 2019a,b preprint). In one of these, Bodo M. Stern and Erin K. O'Shea proposed a ‘publish first, curate second’ approach to academic publishing (Stern and O'Shea, 2019). This approach – perhaps better known as the ‘Publish, Review, Curate’ (PRC) model of publishing – aims to separate the dissemination and curation of scientific work. Importantly, it puts the authors in the driver's seat by allowing them to decide when and what to publish (Stern and O'Shea, 2019). Peer review then follows publication, thereby preventing the delay in dissemination. In line with this kind of thinking, another paper, which appeared at the same time, argues for funder preprint mandates (Sever et al., 2019a,b preprint). This plan, proposed by the co-founders of bioRxiv and the co-founder of PLOS, was termed Plan U (for ‘universal’) and aims to ensure accessibility of scientific literature and to support the implementation of new peer review and research evaluation initiatives, like the PRC model (Sever et al., 2019a,b preprint). These papers, and their proposals, have been hugely influential in further shaping the preprint and wider publishing ecosystem.The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic at the end of 2019 further emphasised the importance of preprints for rapid information dissemination. The pandemic drove a surge in preprints, with 32% of COVID-19 papers listed on the National Institutes of Health (NIH)’s portfolio being preprints (as reported by ASAPbio). During this time, PubMed started a pilot experiment, as part of which they indexed preprints of NIH-funded authors (Funk et al., 2024 preprint; more information has also been provided by the National Library of Medicine).Various preprint initiatives were launched during the COVID-19 pandemic, including Rapid Reviews: COVID-19, which received the 2022 PROSE Award for Innovation in Journal Publishing. It later evolved into a true overlay journal: Rapid Reviews\Infectious Diseases. Both Early Evidence Base (EEB) and Sciety were launched in 2020 as platforms focused on aggregating peer-reviewed preprints. As winner of the ASAPbio PreprintSprint, the main goal of EEB was to ensure that both expert evaluations and author responses are openly available, enabling readers to assess the findings critically (see EMBO news post). Similarly, the goal of Sciety (part of eLife) is to support preprint peer-review communities to openly share their efforts, allowing multiple groups, rather than a single journal, to participate in the review and curation of scientific literature.Following the pandemic, the adoption and visibility of preprints within the biological sciences has been steadily growing. In 2021, bioRxiv introduced a dashboard providing links to scientific discussion and evaluation of bioRxiv preprints (see bioRxivnews post). preLights, which had further developed into an invaluable resource by this time, with >1000 posts by early 2021, was fully integrated with the bioRxiv dashboard, featuring under the Community Reviews tab (see preLights news post). Not only through preLights did The Company of Biologists help to increase the reach and visibility of preprints, however: the journal Development introduced ‘In preprints’ articles highlighting key preprints in the field, sparking discussions and guiding readers to significant new research (Briscoe and Grewal, 2022).In 2022, EMBO announced that refereed preprints would be recognised as an eligibility criterion for the EMBO Postdoctoral Fellowships. This move reflected a wider acceptance of preprints. Other funders had already started to include preprints in the evaluation of applicants, such as the Australian Research Council and European Research Council (see examples of funding agencies with changes to policies surrounding using preprints). In fact, some funders, such as Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation, started to mandate the posting of preprints (see policy document). In March 2024, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced a future policy requiring all grantees to share their research as preprints – another big step toward the normalisation of preprints in scientific communication.In 2023, the proportion of life sciences research disseminated as preprints grew to 10.7%, underscoring their sustained adoption (Levchenko et al., 2024). In response, eLife made a bold move in switching altogether to a model in which they would only publish ‘Reviewed Preprints’ (Eisen et al., 2022; see eLifenews post). They created quite some ripples in the publishing ecosystem, and the impact of this drastic change of policy is still being evaluated (Behrens et al., 2024).Preprints are here to stay, and The Company of Biologists remains determined to be at the forefront of this ever-growing movement. At Biology Open, the vision is to accelerate the dissemination of biological research by requiring that all journal submissions be posted as preprints (Adhikari et al., 2025). Platforms like preLights are more relevant than ever, offering curated and community-driven insights into the rapidly growing body of preprinted literature. Still, it's clear that preprinting and preprint peer review haven't (yet) replaced traditional journal publishing. The stranglehold of journal metrics and reputation still mean that researchers want and need formal publications for career progression. But also, more positively, there is recognition that journals provide important services to the community – not only in coordinating expert peer review, but also in helping to ensure ethical integrity and in collating and disseminating research results in an accessible format. Thus, preprints and journal articles complement each other – the one providing rapid access to research results, the other ensuring the long-term integrity and preservation of the scientific record. Moving forwards, we at The Company of Biologists will continue to experiment with our preprint-related activities and policies – in line with the ever-evolving needs of our communities.
journals.biologists.com
July 1, 2025 at 5:45 AM
A decade of preprints in biology
How @biologists.bsky.social has championed preprint adoption since 2014
Launching preLights, supporting Review Commons & introducing In Preprints in @dev-journal.bsky.social
How @biologists.bsky.social has championed preprint adoption since 2014
Launching preLights, supporting Review Commons & introducing In Preprints in @dev-journal.bsky.social
Reposted by Justin Crocker
Lobbyist who spent past 5 years advocating against regulations on pesticides has been chosen to head the EPA pesticides office. subscriber.politicopro.com/article/eene...
E&E News: Farm industry lobbyist, MAHA critic to head EPA pesticides office
Kyle Kunkler departs from the American Soybean Association to take the helm of the agency's program regulating farm chemicals.
subscriber.politicopro.com
June 28, 2025 at 12:22 PM
Lobbyist who spent past 5 years advocating against regulations on pesticides has been chosen to head the EPA pesticides office. subscriber.politicopro.com/article/eene...
Reposted by Justin Crocker
A Drosophila single-cell 3D spatiotemporal multi-omics atlas unveils panoramic key regulators of cell-type differentiation: Cell
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www.cell.com/cell/abstrac...
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www.cell.com/cell/abstrac...
A Drosophila single-cell 3D spatiotemporal multi-omics atlas unveils panoramic key regulators of cell-type differentiation
This work introduces Flysta3D-v2, a 3D spatiotemporal multi-omics database that spans
Drosophila development from embryogenesis to metamorphosis. Through the integration
of multimodal data, we detail ...
www.cell.com
June 28, 2025 at 5:57 AM
A Drosophila single-cell 3D spatiotemporal multi-omics atlas unveils panoramic key regulators of cell-type differentiation: Cell
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