About this journal
Aims and scope
The intestinal microbiota plays a pivotal role in human physiology. Characterizing its structure and function has implications for health and disease, impacting nutrition and obesity, brain function, allergic responses, immunity, inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, cancer development, cardiac disease, liver disease, and others.
Gut Microbes provides a platform for presenting and discussing cutting-edge research on all aspects of microorganisms populating the intestine. The journal focuses in particular on mechanistic and cause and effect studies.
Gut Microbes is the sister journal of Gut Microbes Reports , which has a greater focus on emerging topics and comparative and incremental studies.
Gut Microbes brings together a multidisciplinary community of scientists working in the areas of:
- Profiling the intestinal microbiota
- Gastrointestinal disease: mechanisms, host defense, diagnosis, epidemiology
- Host-pathogen interactions including enteric disease and bacterial pathogenesis
- Quorum sensing and toxicity
- Probiotics and prebiotics
- Novel treatments and clinical trials
- Role of intestinal microbiota in health and disease
Gut Microbes accepts Research Papers/Reports, Reviews, Brief Reports, Research Letters, Commentaries and Views, Creative Commentaries, Meeting Reports, Data Notes, Invited Editorials for publication.
*Please note that Gut Microbes converted to a fully open access journal beginning with Volume 12 (2020). The Print ISSN is not in active use as this journal is no longer published in print.
Journal metrics
Usage
- 1.8M annual downloads/views
Citation metrics
- 12.2 (2023) Impact Factor
- Q1 Impact Factor Best Quartile
- 12.3 (2023) 5 year IF
- 18.2 (2023) CiteScore (Scopus)
- Q1 CiteScore Best Quartile
- 2.069 (2023) SNIP
- 3.075 (2023) SJR
Speed/acceptance
- 5 days avg. from submission to first decision
- 48 days avg. from submission to first post-review decision
- 13 days avg. from acceptance to online publication
- 21% acceptance rate
Understanding and using journal metrics
Journal metrics can be a useful tool for readers, as well as for authors who are deciding where to submit their next manuscript for publication. However, any one metric only tells a part of the story of a journal’s quality and impact. Each metric has its limitations which means that it should never be considered in isolation, and metrics should be used to support and not replace qualitative review.
We strongly recommend that you always use a number of metrics, alongside other qualitative factors such as a journal’s aims & scope, its readership, and a review of past content published in the journal. In addition, a single article should always be assessed on its own merits and never based on the metrics of the journal it was published in.
For more details, please read the Author Services guide to understanding journal metrics.
Journal metrics in brief
Usage and acceptance rate data above are for the last full calendar year and are updated annually in February. Speed data is updated every six months, based on the prior six months. Citation metrics are updated annually mid-year. Please note that some journals do not display all of the following metrics (find out why).
- Usage: the total number of times articles in the journal were viewed by users of Taylor & Francis Online in the previous calendar year, rounded to the nearest thousand.
Citation Metrics
- Impact Factor*: the average number of citations received by articles published in the journal within a two-year window. Only journals in the Clarivate Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), Arts and Humanities Citation Index (AHCI) and the Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) have an Impact Factor.
- Impact Factor Best Quartile*: the journal’s highest subject category ranking in the Journal Citation Reports. Q1 = 25% of journals with the highest Impact Factors.
- 5 Year Impact Factor*: the average number of citations received by articles in the journal within a five-year window.
- CiteScore (Scopus)†: the average number of citations received by articles in the journal over a four-year period.
- CiteScore Best Quartile†: the journal’s highest CiteScore ranking in a Scopus subject category. Q1 = 25% of journals with the highest CiteScores.
- SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper): the number of citations per paper in the journal, divided by citation potential in the field.
- SJR (Scimago Journal Rank): Average number of (weighted) citations in one year, divided by the number of articles published in the journal in the previous three years.
Speed/acceptance
- From submission to first decision: the average (median) number of days for a manuscript submitted to the journal to receive a first decision. Based on manuscripts receiving a first decision in the last six months.
- From submission to first post-review decision: the average (median) number of days for a manuscript submitted to the journal to receive a first decision if it is sent out for peer review. Based on manuscripts receiving a post-review first decision in the last six months.
- From acceptance to online publication: the average (median) number of days from acceptance of a manuscript to online publication of the Version of Record. Based on articles published in the last six months.
- Acceptance rate: articles accepted for publication by the journal in the previous calendar year as percentage of all papers receiving a final decision.
For more details on the data above, please read the Author Services guide to understanding journal metrics.
*Copyright: Journal Citation Reports®, Clarivate Analytics
†Copyright: CiteScore™, Scopus
Editorial board
Editor-in-Chief
Beth McCormick
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, MA, US
Editor Emeritus
Gail Hecht
Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine
Maywood, IL, US
Acquisitions Editor
Adam Weiss
Adam.c.Weiss@taylorandfrancis.com
Prague, CZ
Associate Editors
Michael Bailey - The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, US
Shai Bel - Bar-Ilan University, Safed, IL
Vanni Bucci - University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, US
Benoit Chassaing - Institut Pasteur, Paris, FR
Grace Chen - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, US
Yingzi Cong - University of Texas, Galveston, TX, US
Timothy L. Cover - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN
Soumita Das - University of Massachusetts-Lowell, Lowell, MA, US
Andrew Gewirtz - Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, US
Ravinder Gill - University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, US
Jennifer Gommerman - University of Toronto, Toronto, CA
Scott Handley - Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, US
Yan He - Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, CN
Jonathan Jacobs - David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, US
Rheinallt M. Jones - Emory University, Atlanta, GA, US
Purna C. Kashyap - Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, US
Simon Keely - University of Newcastle, Callaghan, AU
Leigh Knodler - University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, US
Francine Marques - Monash University, Melbourne, AU
Ece Mutlu - Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, US
Beatriz Peñalver Bernabé - University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, US
J. Christian Pérez - The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, US
Geoffrey A. Preidis - Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, US
Osbaldo Resendis-Antonio - Instituto Nacional de Medicina Genómica, México City, MX
Jason Ridlon - University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, US
Rachel Rigby - Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK
Tor Savidge - Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, US
Amar Singh - The University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, US
Jun Sun - University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, US
Ki-Tae Suk - Hallym University, Chuncheon-si, KR
Ryan M Thomas - University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, US
Alfredo G. Torres - University of Texas, Galveston, TX, US
Sonia Villapol - Houston Methodist Academic Institute, Houston, TX, US
V.K. Viswanathan - University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, US
Yinglin Xia - University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, US
Cemal Yazici - University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, US
Alejandra Zarate-Potes - Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, UK
Amany Zekry - University of New South Wales, Sydney, AU
Junior Editors
Evan Bradley - University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, US
Alberto Caminero - McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CA
Jessie Ellis - National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, MD, US
Heather Galipeau - McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CA
Jennifer Roxas - University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, US
Editorial Board
Jasmohan Bajaj - Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, US
Brian DeBosch - Washington UniversitySchool of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, US
Robert Britton - Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, US
Patrice Cani - UCLouvain, Brussels, BE
Muriel Derrien - Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, BE
Suzanne Devkota - Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, US
Sara Di Rienzi - Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, US
Sharon M. Donovan - University of Illinois at Urbana, Urbana, IL, US
Youjun Feng - Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, CN
Harry Flint - University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK
Dale Gerding - Hines VA Hospital, Hines, IL, US
Glenn R. Gibson - University of Reading, Reading, UK
Uri Gophna - Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, IL
John Haran - University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, US
Masanori Hatakeyama - University of Tokyo, Tokyo, JP
Kenya Honda - RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences, Kanagawa, JP
Lora Hooper - University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, US
John Y. Kao - University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, MI, US
James B. Kaper - University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, US
Ciaran Kelly - Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, US
Rob Knight - University of California, San Diego, CA, US
Wayne Lencer - Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, US
John Leong - Tufts University School of Medicine, MA, US
Xi Ma - China Agricultural University, Beijing, China
Ana Maldonado-Contreras - University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, US
Abdul Malik - Washingtom University in St. Louis, Saint Louis, MO, US
Sven Pettersson - Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, SE
Dana J. Philpott - University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CA
Eamonn Quigley - Houston Methodist Hospital, TX, US
John F. Rawls - Duke University, Durham, NC, US
Yehuda Ringel - University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC, US
Ilan Rosenshine - Hadassah-Hebrew University School of Medicine, Jerusalem, IL
Nita H. Salzman - Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI
Mary Ellen Sanders - International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics, Davis, CA, US
Philippe Sansonetti - Institut Pasteur and Collège de France, Paris, FR
Balfour Sartor - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, US
Karla Fullner Satchell - Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, US
Fergus Shanahan - University College Cork, Cork, IE
Nanda Kumar Navalpur Shanmugam - Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
David Sela - University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, US
Vanessa Sperandio - University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, US
Christopher Staley - University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, US
Phil Tarr - Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, US
Casey Theriot - North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, US
Gayatri Vedantam - University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, US
Elena Verdú - McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CA
Gary D. Wu - University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, US
Fang Yan - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, US
Vincent B Young - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, US
Melody Zeng - Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, US
Liping Zhao - Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, NJ, USA
Last updated 16/10/2024
Abstracting and indexing
Gut Microbes is abstracted/indexed in:
- Elsevier BV
- EMBASE
- Scopus - National Library of Medicine
- PubMed/MEDLINE - Clarivate
- Biological Abstracts
- BIOSIS Previews
- Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition
- Science Citation Index Expended (also known as SciSearch®)
Open access
Gut Microbes is an open access journal and only publishes open access articles. Publishing open access means that your article will be free to access online immediately on publication, increasing the visibility, readership, and impact of your research.
Why choose open access?
- Increase the discoverability and readership of your article
- Make an impact and reach new readers, not just those with easy access to a research library
- Freely share your work with anyone, anywhere
- Comply with funding mandates and meet the requirements of your institution, employer or funder
- Rigorous peer review for every open access article
Article Publishing Charges (APC)
To publish open access in this journal you may be asked to pay an Article Publishing Charge (APC). You may be able to publish your article at no cost to yourself or with a reduced APC if your institution or research funder has an open access agreement or membership with Taylor & Francis. Discounts and waivers may also be available for researchers in selected countries when publishing in open access journals.
Use our APC finder to calculate your article publishing charge
News, offers and calls for papers
News and offers
Continuous publication
Associated with:
- Gut Microbes Reports (null - current)
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