NOTES ARE POSTED HERE IN ORDER RECEIVED FOR MNL VOLUME 85,
2011. They are posted as provided, and will be replaced with redacted copy once
the printed copy is finalized, FALL 2011.
May 1, 2012 update.
Vol 85 is at the printers. USA print subscribers should receive copy in
2-3 weeks; foreign will vary, but will be by airmail and will be mailed about
one week from today, May 1 2012.
There was a call for submissions, JAN 2011, by email. If you
did not receive this call, please check MaizeGDB to be sure your email and
address are correct and use the online form to make any updates.
Adapted from the
foreword for MNL Volume 83, 2009.
The Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter exists for the
benefit of the maize community as an informal vehicle for communication. Its inception and continuation has been
to foster cooperation among those interested in investigating maize. This cooperation has distinguished our
field from others and as a consequence has moved it forward at a pace greater
than would have occurred otherwise.
Your submissions are encouraged to disseminate knowledge about our field
that might otherwise go unrecorded. We encourage the community to carry studies
of general scientific interest to the formal literature. However, there is a great need to share
technical tips, protocols, mutant descriptions, map information, ideas and
other isolated information useful in the lab and field.
Because maize is both a commercial species and a genetic
model system, the danger exists that the sharing of research materials might be
diminished. It is imperative for us
to work together to prevent this from occurring. Certainly, basic findings should be
transferred to the industrial sector and basic advances in industry should be
shared with the academic community for the benefit of both. Published materials must be shared for
research purposes with the only restriction being against commercial use.
We remind the readers that contributions to the Newsletter
do not constitute formal publications.
Citations to them should be accompanied by permission from the authors
if at all possible. Notes can be
submitted at any time and are entered into MaizeGDB. We have set an arbitrary cutoff of
January 31, 2010 for the next print copy, volume 84. Electronic submission is encouraged and
is done by sending your contributions as attachments, or as text of an email,
to [email protected].
Submissions must require minimal editing to be accepted.
We encourage the community to carry studies of general
scientific interest to the formal literature. However, there is a great need to share
technical tips, protocols, mutant descriptions, map information, ideas and
other isolated information useful in the lab and field.
To send notes
Send your notes as attachments or as the text of
an email addressed to [email protected] (we will acknowledge
receipt, and will contact you further if necessary). If email is not feasible,
please mail a double-spaced, letter-quality copy of your note, preferably with
a disk containing an electronic version to Mary Schaeffer, 203 Curtis Hall,
University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211-7020. Please consult a recent issue
for style format. Figures, charts and tables should be compact and
"camera"-ready, and supplied in electronic form (jpg or gif) if
possible. To separate columns in tables, please tab instead of using spaces, to
ensure quality tabulations on the web. Your MNL Notes will go on the Web
verbatim promptly, and will be edited and prepared for printing in the annual
issue. Submissions must require only minimal editing.
The Newsletter sponsors a new online journal, called the
"maize gene review", hosted
at www.maizegenereview.org. The inaugural submissions were included in the MNL vol 83, in map order, following the Table of Contents. It
is modeled on the 2000 "Mutants of Maize", eds
MG Neuffer, EH Coe and S Wessler, Cold Spring Harbor, NY. The emphasis is
mutants, but reviews will include any gene with experimentally confirmed
function. This journal was first described in a poster presentation at the 2009
Maize Genetic Conference in St. Charles, IL and was an invited presentation at
the 3rd Int. Biocurator Conference, 2009
Berlin, Germany. We welcome contributions from all cooperators on their
favorite genes. The text summaries of each mutant, and any new images, will be
supplied to MaizeGDB, as was done in 1995 from the "Mutants of
Maize", crediting authors and the review page. Each year, new submissions,
and any substantial revisions of previous reviews, will be included in the
print copy of MNL. Unlike contributions to the Newsletter,
these will be peer-reviewed and may be cited without permission of authors. The
maize gene review adheres to the stipulations of the "Creative Commons
License", with normal copyright retained by authors, but not this
Newsletter.