Acta Crystallographica Section D: Structural Biology
Published by John Wiley & Sons
eISSN : 2059-7983
Abbreviation : Acta Crystallogr. Sect. D Struct. Biology
Aims & Scope
Acta Crystallographica Section D welcomes the submission of articles covering any aspect of structural biology, with a particular emphasis on the structures of biological macromolecules or the methods used to determine them.
Reports on new structures of biological importance may address the smallest macromolecules to the largest complex molecular machines.
These structures may have been determined using any structural biology technique including crystallography, NMR, cryoEM and/or other techniques.
The key criterion is that such articles must present significant new insights into biological, chemical or medical sciences.
The inclusion of complementary data that support the conclusions drawn from the structural studies (such as binding studies, mass spectrometry, enzyme assays, or analysis of mutants or other modified forms of biological macromolecule) is encouraged.
Methods articles may include new approaches to any aspect of biological structure determination or structure analysis but will only be accepted where they focus on new methods that are demonstrated to be of general applicability and importance to structural biology.
Articles describing particularly difficult problems in structural biology are also welcomed, if the analysis would provide useful insights to others facing similar problems.
View Aims & ScopeMetrics & Ranking
Impact Factor
Year | Value |
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2025 | 3.8 |
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
Year | Value |
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2024 | 1.821 |
Quartile
Year | Value |
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2024 | Q1 |
Journal Rank
Year | Value |
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2024 | 1710 |
Journal Citation Indicator
Year | Value |
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2024 | 3830 |
Impact Factor Trend
Abstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.