Submissions should be made via the online manuscript tracking system.  For technical help with the submission system, please contact the journal. Initial submission does not need to be formatted to journal style. For ease of evaluation and submission, the journal recommends an editable Word .docx or Authorea text document and a single merged PDF that includes all parts of main text and high-resolution figures embedded into the file.  A suitable PDF will be constructed by uploading text and figures using the online manuscript tracking system.  This journal  does not impose word count and figure limits.  Table 1 contains the journal’s suggestions so that the manuscript is respectful of reader time and are readable by specialist and generalist alike.AcknowledgementsAuthors should list all funding sources here, please check Open Funder Registry. Contributions and material support from anyone not listed as an author should be acknowledged here, with permission from the contributor. Thanks to anonymous reviewers are not allowed.Conflict of Interest StatementAll authors are required to declare if they have potential conflicts of interest related to the submission, or none. This declaration shall be published. Submitting authors shall confirm all co-authors agree with the final statement.AbstractWhat is known in the field, for a general readership. Define the area and knowledge for a specialist.Explain the motivation and need for the research defined by the gap in existing knowledge.State your main claim or finding . Support that with evidence, statistics and detail, mentioning essential methods and analytical techniques that provided the evidence.State the meaning and significance of your new results for research in the field.End by suggesting realistic immediate implications and uses of your findings in your field and more broadly.IntroductionGive credit to and cite all the primary research publications that lay the background to this work including those to be discussed in the Discussion. Give context as to whether these are essential methods and analytic strategies or experimental findings. Ensure that causation, correlation and conjectureResults Make the main claims in logical order, supported by display items and methodsDiscussion Summarize and evaluate the robustness and meaning of the main findings in light of existing publications. Be skeptical and discuss any limitations of the study and conditions where the results may or may not be applicableMaterials and MethodsMethods and materials transparencyOffer methods used in the analysis, and materials used to conduct the research to any researcher for purposes of reproducing the results or replicating the procedure.  Indicate any restrictions on analytic methods including software, and tools and study materials available to other researchers. Specify how, where and when that material will be available.  If an existing method or tool is used in the research, the authors are responsible for checking the license and state confirmation of permission.To obtain Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs): Use the Resource Identification Portal .Design and analysis transparencyAuthors are encouraged to review standards for disclosing key aspects of the research design and data analysis at http://www.equator-network.org/ and use those that are relevant for their research. Research reporting standards are widely adopted in our field, and exceeding their evolving requirements is essential to sustain the impact of genetics and genomics for research and for society.  Here is the current list of reporting standards, vocabularies, models, schemas and databases that we recommend we recommend at FAIRsharing.org.Human studies and research participantsIdentify the ethics committee that approved the human study, and that the study conforms to recognized standards, for example: Declaration of Helsinki; US Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects; or European Medicines Agency Guidelines for Good Clinical Practice. If no formal ethics committee is available, state that the research was carried out in accordance with recognized standards (e.g. the Declaration of Helsinki, as revised in 2013).Images and information from individual participants, including participants from patient registries and databases, will only be published where the authors have obtained the individual's free prior informed consent. Authors do not need to provide a copy of consent forms to the publisher but, in signing the author license to publish, authors are required to confirm that specific informed consent to publish the image has been obtained. Publisher has a standard patient consent form available for authors to use if required. This requirement to obtained informed consent applies whether or not patients are identifiable from the information presented in the submission.Animal studiesFor submissions involving animal studies, state the protocol and procedures employed were ethically reviewed and approved, and the name of the organization giving approval. State whether experiments were performed in accordance with relevant institutional and national guidelines and regulations for the care and use of laboratory animals:US authors should cite compliance with the US National Research Council's Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, the US Public Health Service's Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, and Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.UK authors should conform to UK legislation under the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 Amendment Regulations (SI 2012/3039).EU authors should conform to Directive 2010/63/EU.Cell line authentication Declare where the cells were obtained, whether the cell lines have been tested and authenticated and the method by which the cells were tested. If cells were obtained directly from a cell bank that performs cell line characterizations and passaged in the user’s laboratory for fewer than 6 months after receipt or resuscitation, re-authentication is not required. Data Availability StatementPlease choose text from Table 3 and provide a citation to available data in the References list. These sequence data have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession number XXXXX  Gene expression data (derived from microarrays or sequencing) has been deposited to a MIAME- or MINSEQE-compliant public repository like the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) with accession XXXXXProtein Sequence Data should be submitted to UniProt with accession XXXXXReferences [terms in brackets will be removed before publication]1. [article] Wood WG, Eckert GP, Igbavboa U, Muller WE. Statins and neuroprotection: a prescription to move the field forward. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2010; 1199:69-76. 2. [book] Hoppert, M. Microscopic techniques in biotechnology. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH; 2003.3. [dataset]Authors; Year; Dataset title; Data repository or archive; Version (if any); Persistent identifier (e.g. DOI)4. [URI, GWAS summary statistics] Savage, J.E. et al. Genome-wide association meta-analysis in 269,867      individuals identifies new genetic and functional links to intelligence      https://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas/studies/GCST006250 (2018)5. [supplementary data] Jagadeesan, A. et al. MDS/PCA plots within West Africa    https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5640931 (2017)Tables (each table complete with title and footnotes)      
To use the actual template to write an Article, please use this link: https://authorea.com/templates/article_template_for_genetics_genomics_nextSubmissions should be made via the online manuscript tracking system.  For technical help with the submission system, please contact the journal. Initial submission does not need to be formatted to this journal's style  For ease of evaluation and submission, the journal recommends an editable Word .docx or Authorea text document and a single merged PDF that includes all parts of main text and high-resolution figures embedded into the file.  A suitable PDF will be constructed by uploading text and figures using the online manuscript tracking system.  This journal does not impose word count and figure limits.  Table 1 contains the journal’s suggestions so that the manuscript is respectful of reader time and are readable by specialist and generalist alike.AcknowledgementsAuthors should list all funding sources here, please check Open Funder Registry. Contributions and material support from anyone not listed as an author should be acknowledged here, with permission from the contributor. Thanks to anonymous reviewers are not allowed.Conflict of Interest StatementAll authors are required to declare if they have potential conflicts of interest related to the submission, or none. This declaration shall be published. Submitting authors shall confirm all co-authors agree with the final statement.AbstractWhat is known in the field, for a general readership. Define the area and knowledge for a specialist.Explain the motivation and need for the research defined by the gap in existing knowledge.State your main claim or finding . Support that with evidence, statistics and detail, mentioning essential methods and analytical techniques that provided the evidence.State the meaning and significance of your new results for research in the field.End by suggesting realistic immediate implications and uses of your findings in your field and more broadly.IntroductionGive credit to and cite all the primary research publications that lay the background to this work including those to be discussed in the Discussion. Give context as to whether these are essential methods and analytic strategies or experimental findings. Ensure that causation, correlation and conjectureResults Make the main claims in logical order, supported by display items and methodsDiscussion Summarize and evaluate the robustness and meaning of the main findings in light of existing publications. Be skeptical and discuss any limitations of the study and conditions where the results may or may not be applicableMaterials and MethodsMethods and materials transparencyOffer methods used in the analysis, and materials used to conduct the research to any researcher for purposes of reproducing the results or replicating the procedure.  Indicate any restrictions on analytic methods including software, and tools and study materials available to other researchers. Specify how, where and when that material will be available.  If an existing method or tool is used in the research, the authors are responsible for checking the license and state confirmation of permission.To obtain Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs): Use the Resource Identification Portal .Design and analysis transparencyAuthors are encouraged to review standards for disclosing key aspects of the research design and data analysis at http://www.equator-network.org/ and use those that are relevant for their research. Research reporting standards are widely adopted in our field, and exceeding their evolving requirements is essential to sustain the impact of genetics and genomics for research and for society.  Here is the current list of reporting standards, vocabularies, models, schemas and databases that we recommend we recommend at FAIRsharing.org.Human studies and research participantsIdentify the ethics committee that approved the human study, and that the study conforms to recognized standards, for example: Declaration of Helsinki; US Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects; or European Medicines Agency Guidelines for Good Clinical Practice. If no formal ethics committee is available, state that the research was carried out in accordance with recognized standards (e.g. the Declaration of Helsinki, as revised in 2013).Images and information from individual participants, including participants from patient registries and databases, will only be published where the authors have obtained the individual's free prior informed consent. Authors do not need to provide a copy of consent forms to the publisher but, in signing the author license to publish, authors are required to confirm that specific informed consent to publish the image has been obtained. Wiley has a standard patient consent form available for authors to use if required. This requirement to obtained informed consent applies whether or not patients are identifiable from the information presented in the submission.Animal studiesFor submissions involving animal studies, state the protocol and procedures employed were ethically reviewed and approved, and the name of the organization giving approval. State whether experiments were performed in accordance with relevant institutional and national guidelines and regulations for the care and use of laboratory animals:US authors should cite compliance with the US National Research Council's Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, the US Public Health Service's Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, and Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.UK authors should conform to UK legislation under the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 Amendment Regulations (SI 2012/3039).EU authors should conform to Directive 2010/63/EU.Cell line authentication Declare where the cells were obtained, whether the cell lines have been tested and authenticated and the method by which the cells were tested. If cells were obtained directly from a cell bank that performs cell line characterizations and passaged in the user’s laboratory for fewer than 6 months after receipt or resuscitation, re-authentication is not required. Data Availability StatementPlease choose text from Table 3 and provide a citation to available data in the References list. These sequence data have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession number XXXXX  Gene expression data (derived from microarrays or sequencing) has been deposited to a MIAME- or MINSEQE-compliant public repository like the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) with accession XXXXXProtein Sequence Data should be submitted to UniProt with accession XXXXXReferences [terms in brackets will be removed before publication]1. [article] Wood WG, Eckert GP, Igbavboa U, Muller WE. Statins and neuroprotection: a prescription to move the field forward. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2010; 1199:69-76. 2. [book] Hoppert, M. Microscopic techniques in biotechnology. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH; 2003.3. [dataset]Authors; Year; Dataset title; Data repository or archive; Version (if any); Persistent identifier (e.g. DOI)4. [URI, GWAS summary statistics] Savage, J.E. et al. Genome-wide association meta-analysis in 269,867      individuals identifies new genetic and functional links to intelligence      https://www.ebi.ac.uk/gwas/studies/GCST006250 (2018)5. [supplementary data] Jagadeesan, A. et al. MDS/PCA plots within West Africa    https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5640931 (2017)Tables (each table complete with title and footnotes)      
Editors may return to authors and peer reviewers their assessment of improvements in metadata, data access or reporting transparency that might improve the impact of the article by enabling reproducible research. In some cases, these improvements might need to be made as a precondition for peer review.This checklist incorporates community ideas for good research practice:https://www.cos.io/initiatives/top-guidelinesCitation StandardsAll data sets and code are cited in the text as ReferencesPersistent URI or DOI for data sets and codeCitation in Reference section contains author/title/year/URIData, Code, and Materials TransparencyAre the following present and sufficient to independently reproduce all claimed results?For reused public datasets: data URIs, program code, statistics scriptsFor new data and resourcesNew data available at a trusted digital repository OR all available in paperVariables, parameters, treatment conditions, and observation (number)Full procedures for collection, preprocessing, cleaning, or generating the dataCode, scripts, codebooks, algorithms (URI or all in paper)Research materials (description and source) and procedures necessary to conduct an independent replication of the research.Exceptions for ethical or legal restrictions to reproducible researchConditions on the dataset or materials that restrict researcher access and useAccess protocol for data or materialsAccess to software and other documentationIndicate all data and materials without the above constraintsResources available at a community-endorsed public repositoryAuthors request delay of access until publicationDo the editors identify any factors that might delay peer review/ delay acceptance for publication/ require editorial explanation upon publication /need expression of editorial concern / risk author might need to retract because of reproducibility concerns?Design and Analysis TransparencyAuthors declare reporting is in accordance with community standards listed on http://www.equator-network.org/ or https://fairsharing.orgEditors recommend the authors check the following community standards and report their results accordinglyReplicationSince we do not believe that even the best peer reviewed experimental design can overcome sources of variation among studies, the policy of the journal is to encourage submission of experimental designs that contain their own replication. We also encourage studies replicating or powered to replicate work published in this journal.Report contains both hypothesis generation and replication in separate studiesReport contains an unreplicated study
Advanced Genetics recognizes that the assessment of conceptual advance and potential utility and interest are subjective.  The journal’s editors therefore keep the following questions in mind when assessing a submitted manuscript and then provide specific explanation how these considerations apply to the selection of this particular manuscript.Initial Editorial AssessmentAvailable to authors of all manuscripts. Open if the article is publishedScopeDo the research, methods or topics fit within the aims of this, or another journal? Conceptual advanceWhat is already known in this area and related fields?What gap in knowledge motivates this research?How do the main claims of this study relate to benchmark prior publications?Is this field new, growing or mature?What new insight is offered by the current submission?If confirmatory, or a negative finding, what is the value added?Potential InterestAre many labs likely to conduct their research differently because of these findings?Is the paper likely attract readers beyond the immediate research community of the study?Can the main conclusion be generalized to other areas of genetics and genomics? Strength of conclusionWhat evidence and methods support the main claim of the study?Are the experimental and analytical approaches aligned with the current community standards?What are the technical issues with key datasets and workflows, what reviewer expertise is needed?Are the authors skeptical, are alternative interpretations ruled out?Is there clear separation of hypothesis generation and testing?Are conclusions replicated or supported by multiple lines of evidence? Reviewer instructions: All reviewer comments are read by the authors and editors, and are open if the article is publishedArticle types with data and analysis:Summarize the main claims in the context of prior publicationsIdentify the strengths and weaknesses in evidence, design and methodsPlease number each of your comments to the author, starting with the most importantAre all data, analysis and methods usefully available as declared in accordance with relevant community standards?Are there any ethical concerns about human or animal research subjects, perceived conflicts or attribution?How should the editor interpret your comments in making a decision?Declare your own conflicts of interest, or no conflict of interestPerspective (literature review) article type:Which of the main concepts and advances in the field has the author fairly represented?Will this Perspective lead a large number of researchers to conduct their research differently?Are the claims, evidence and recommendations presented in a clear and logical order?Declare your own conflicts of interest, or no conflict of interestAre all of the display items compelling or needed? 

Myles Axton

and 1 more

Research in genetics provides the basis for understanding the function and evolution of all living things. The disciplines of reading and writing genomes translate into sustainable economic development with the rational global goals of food security, maternal and child health, precision medicine, education and access to informatics technologies. We believe that many publications in our field are motivated by these goals and contain reusable modular elements that can be recombined both in research and in its translation, to attain them. Open research entails sharing not only the conclusions of science, but its materials, provenance and gestation for the widest reuse by human and computational users. This means that we and our readers deplore any hiding or obscuring datasets or methods, and regret datasets in formally public repositories that have very slow accession or transfer rates. However, we will endeavor to work with all data producers who make contributions in good faith to genetics and genomics research.Genetics & Genomics Next (GGN ) is an Open Research journal from Wiley, published online using the CC-BY 4.0 open attribution license to encourage maximum credit and rapid creative reuse of all scholarly work. We are delighted to receive original research Articles, Resources, Analysis, Technical Reports and Perspectives in the areas of human, animal, plant and microbial genetics, genomics and epigenomics, selecting those reports for peer review that we judge editorially to have the highest research utility, ethical standards and societal impact. As professional, full-time editors at Wiley, we take responsibility for all manuscript decisions and peer reviewer assignment. Our Advisory Board Members have a complementary role to guide GGN’s mission as they see fit, anticipating the evolution of research and standards in our field, and, with us, providing leadership in promoting excellence in open research. Unlike Editorial Board members at some journals, GGN advisors are our mentors, not manuscript editors. We welcome their commitment to the journal for as long as they wish, and advisors may leave or rejoin the board at will.Since we offer an online journal, we are happy to consider reports in any format for peer review, provided they would not burden referees with their unusual length or complexity. We also welcome pre-submission enquiries via our online database (https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ggn). Author and dataset contributions and consortium roles can be described via the CRediT contributor taxonomy (https://www.casrai.org/credit.html). We support a range of community standards and databases and the FAIRSharing \cite{Sansone_2019} community standards site (https://fairsharing.org) for best practices and semantic precision. The journal endorses the FAIR \cite{Wilkinson_2016} data principles  (https://www.go-fair.org/fair-principles/) and we recommend database submission of datasets and workflows to replace most of the prior use cases for Supplementary Information.Research Articles should offer a new and substantial conceptual advance based on original experimental research and data, whereas Technical Reports need only detail a useful new method. Perspectives are literature reviews that set standards or propose future strategies in our field. Analysis articles offer opportunity to generate and test new hypotheses by interoperating or reusing existing datasets with new workflows. Resources provide provenance and curation of new datasets that will be of use to the community. If submissions are outside the scope of the journal or if editors consider them premature with respect to their field, we will make customized recommendation for appropriate Wiley journals that would peer review the work or suggest revisions that would typically qualify the work for peer review.Enabling the market for genomics-based ideas needs generosity with rich metadata and careful attention to semantic precision, as well as a sensitive understanding of the legal, ethical and economic underpinning of resources based in the code and the families of living people. For an editor, this means having patience in the face of the many exceptions to the ideal of publicly funded, universal research access to all human, animal and plant genomes and their associated traits and measurements. The resource-benefit balance is ever-present, and legal and ethics frameworks of genetic research evolve slowly in the legacy of past abuses of concepts of heredity. It is therefore essential that we recognize those data license conditions that aim to preserve participation of research subjects, build local resources and capacity and return benefits to the societies that initiated the studies. So, when genetics advances only on the terms of a commercial animal breeder or a security-conscious government, the conclusions and resources offered in the publication need to be maximized for reuse without derailing the sustainable long-term commitment of those producers to make their results available. Even in the sphere of publicly funded data resources in developed countries, it may be networks of excellence (consortia) spanning continents, institutions and generations of diverse funding sources that are the guarantors of the security of the research subjects’ data and the translational success of the research. Publishers looking for a highly cited paper - or data reusers looking to test their new algorithm - need to see where they fit in, and lobby for greater FAIRness from well-funded data generators. Proof of the reuse and interoperability of open research rests with the data users, so data providers need to enable and encourage their work.Author ORCiDsMyles Axton https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8042-4131Alison Liu https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0171-6441