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Cell Press Writing Style Guide

Comprehensive writing guide for Cell, Neuron, Immunity, Molecular Cell, Developmental Cell, Cell Reports, and other Cell Press journals.

Last Updated: 2024


Overview

Cell Press journals emphasize mechanistic depth, rigorous experimentation, and biological insight. Unlike Nature/Science, which prioritize broad accessibility, Cell papers are written for biologists who appreciate technical detail and comprehensive data.

Key Philosophy

"Cell papers tell a complete mechanistic story with exhaustive experimental support."

Primary Goal: Provide deep biological insight with extensive experimental validation that advances understanding of fundamental mechanisms.


Unique Cell Press Features

Cell Press has several distinctive elements not found in other journals:

1. Summary (Not Abstract)

Cell uses "Summary" instead of "Abstract" - functionally similar but emphasizes synthesis.

2. Graphical Abstract (REQUIRED)

A visual summary appearing on the table of contents. This is mandatory for all Cell Press journals.

3. eTOC Blurb

A 30-50 word "elevator pitch" for the electronic table of contents.

4. Highlights

3-4 bullet points (≤85 characters each) capturing key findings.

5. In Brief

A one-sentence summary of the paper.


Audience and Tone

Target Reader

  • Expert biologist in the relevant field
  • Familiar with techniques and terminology
  • Expects comprehensive data and mechanistic depth
  • Values rigor and reproducibility

Tone Characteristics

Characteristic Description
Technical Appropriate jargon for the field
Mechanistic Focus on how and why, not just what
Comprehensive Thorough exploration of the question
Data-rich Extensive experimental support
Precise Exact terminology and quantification

Voice

  • First person ("we") acceptable: "We demonstrate that..."
  • Active voice encouraged: "We identified..."
  • Confident but measured: Strong claims require strong evidence

Summary (Abstract)

Style Requirements

  • 150 words maximum for Cell; varies for other Cell Press journals
  • Flowing paragraph (not structured sections)
  • Dense with information: Every sentence should convey key points
  • Mechanistic focus: What was discovered and how it works

Summary Structure

  1. Context (1 sentence): The biological question/problem
  2. Approach (1 sentence): What you did
  3. Key findings (2-4 sentences): Main results with mechanism
  4. Significance (1 sentence): What this reveals about biology

Example Summary (Cell Style)

Cellular senescence is a stress response that arrests proliferation and 
promotes tissue remodeling, but the mechanisms controlling senescent cell 
fate remain unclear. Here, we identify the transcription factor FOXO4 as a 
critical regulator of senescent cell viability. FOXO4 is highly expressed 
in senescent cells and sequesters p53 away from mitochondria, preventing 
apoptosis. Using a cell-penetrating peptide that disrupts FOXO4-p53 
interaction, we selectively induce senescent cell apoptosis in vitro and 
in vivo. Administration of this peptide to aged mice restores fitness, fur 
density, and renal function. These findings reveal FOXO4-p53 as a senescence 
vulnerability and establish proof-of-concept for targeted senolytic 
interventions in aging.

Graphical Abstract

Purpose

A single-panel visual summary for the table of contents that captures the entire paper's message.

Requirements

  • Size: Square format, typically 1200 × 1200 pixels
  • Layout: Clean, uncluttered
  • Content: Show workflow, key finding, and mechanism
  • Text: Minimal labels, large readable fonts
  • Color: Vibrant but professional

Design Elements

Typical Graphical Abstract Components:
1. Starting point (cell, organism, condition)
2. Intervention/treatment (arrows, symbols)
3. Key measurement or observation
4. Outcome/conclusion (visual representation)
5. Minimal text labels connecting elements

Example Description (for schematic generation)

"Graphical abstract showing: Left panel - normal cells with FOXO4 (blue) 
and p53 (green) separate. Center panel - senescent cells with FOXO4 
binding p53, preventing apoptosis. Right panel - FOXO4 peptide disrupts 
interaction, allowing p53 to reach mitochondria, triggering apoptosis. 
Arrow at bottom showing aged mouse → treatment → rejuvenated mouse."

Highlights

Format

3-4 bullet points, each ≤85 characters (including spaces)

Content Guidelines

  • Start with an action verb or key noun
  • Include specific findings
  • Make each highlight standalone
  • Cover different aspects of the paper

Example Highlights

• FOXO4 is selectively expressed in senescent cells

• FOXO4 sequesters p53, preventing senescent cell apoptosis

• A FOXO4-targeting peptide induces selective senescent cell death

• Senolytic peptide treatment restores function in aged mice

eTOC Blurb

Format

30-50 words for the electronic table of contents

Writing Guidelines

  • Written by authors (editors may modify)
  • Start with author names or key finding
  • Make it a complete, engaging sentence
  • Highlight the most exciting aspect

Example eTOC Blurb

Baar et al. identify FOXO4 as a vulnerability of senescent cells and 
develop a peptide that induces targeted apoptosis of senescent cells. 
Treatment of aged mice with this senolytic peptide restores fitness 
and organ function.

Introduction

Length and Structure

  • 4-6 paragraphs (800-1200 words)
  • More comprehensive than Nature/Science
  • Can include more technical detail and literature

Paragraph-by-Paragraph Guide

Paragraph 1: Biological Context

  • Establish the biological process or system
  • Why is this important to understand?
  • Set up the key players and mechanisms

Paragraphs 2-3: State of the Field

  • Detailed review of relevant prior work
  • Establish what is known mechanistically
  • More comprehensive than Nature/Science

Paragraph 4: The Gap

  • What remains unknown or controversial?
  • Why is this a critical question?
  • What has prevented progress?

Paragraph 5: Your Approach

  • How did you tackle this question?
  • What techniques/systems did you use?
  • Why was your approach appropriate?

Final Paragraph: Key Findings Preview

  • Brief statement of what you discovered
  • How does this advance the field?
  • Set up the structure of results

Example Introduction Paragraph

Cellular senescence is characterized by stable cell-cycle arrest, profound 
chromatin alterations, and a complex secretory phenotype known as the 
senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) (Coppé et al., 2008; 
Rodier and Campisi, 2011). Senescent cells accumulate with age and at 
sites of pathology, where they can drive tissue dysfunction through 
SASP-mediated inflammation and disruption of tissue architecture (van 
Deursen, 2014). The targeted elimination of senescent cells—senolysis—has 
emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy, with genetic and pharmacological 
approaches demonstrating benefits in mouse models of aging and age-related 
disease (Baker et al., 2011, 2016; Chang et al., 2016).

Results

Organization

Cell papers typically have 5-8 results sections, each with a descriptive subheading:

Results
├── Section 1: Discovery of the phenomenon
├── Section 2: Characterization of the mechanism  
├── Section 3: Identification of molecular players
├── Section 4: Functional validation
├── Section 5: In vivo confirmation
├── Section 6: Therapeutic proof-of-concept
└── Section 7: Broader implications

Subheading Style

Cell uses declarative subheadings stating the finding:

"Analysis of FOXO4 expression" (descriptive - avoid) "FOXO4 Is Selectively Upregulated in Senescent Cells" (declarative)

Results Writing Style

  • Comprehensive detail: Cell expects more methodological context in Results than Nature
  • Figure-by-figure narrative: Each major figure often corresponds to a results section
  • Statistical rigor: All quantifications with statistics
  • Biological interpretation: More interpretation woven in than pure Results sections

Example Results Paragraph

To identify transcription factors regulating senescent cell viability, we 
performed RNA sequencing on proliferating and senescent human fibroblasts 
(IMR90 cells induced to senesce by replicative exhaustion, ionizing 
radiation, or oncogene-induced senescence). Differential expression 
analysis revealed 47 transcription factors significantly upregulated 
across all senescence modalities (FDR < 0.05, fold change > 2; Figure 1A 
and Table S1). Among these, FOXO4 showed the highest and most consistent 
upregulation (12.3 ± 2.1-fold; Figure 1B), a finding we confirmed by 
quantitative RT-PCR (Figure 1C) and immunoblot analysis (Figure 1D). 
Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed nuclear FOXO4 accumulation in 
senescent but not proliferating cells (Figure 1E,F).

Discussion

Structure

Cell discussions are thorough and mechanistic:

Paragraph 1: Summary

  • Restate key findings
  • Synthesize the main message

Paragraphs 2-4: Mechanistic Interpretation

  • Deep dive into how your findings fit with known biology
  • Propose models
  • Discuss molecular mechanisms in detail

Paragraph 5: Comparison with Literature

  • How do your findings relate to prior work?
  • Resolve apparent contradictions

Paragraph 6: Implications and Applications

  • Therapeutic implications
  • Broader significance

Paragraph 7: Limitations

  • Honest assessment
  • Open questions remaining

Final Paragraph: Conclusions

  • Big-picture take-home message
  • Future directions

Experimental Procedures / STAR Methods

STAR Methods Format

Cell uses a structured STAR Methods section:

RESOURCE AVAILABILITY
  Lead Contact
  Materials Availability
  Data and Code Availability

EXPERIMENTAL MODEL AND SUBJECT DETAILS
  Cell Lines
  Animals
  Human Subjects

METHOD DETAILS
  [Detailed protocols for each technique]

QUANTIFICATION AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS

Key Reagent Table (KEY RESOURCES TABLE)

Cell requires a comprehensive table of all key resources:

REAGENT or RESOURCE SOURCE IDENTIFIER
Antibodies
Rabbit anti-FOXO4 Abcam Cat#ab12345
Chemicals
Doxorubicin Sigma-Aldrich Cat#D1515
Cell Lines
IMR90 ATCC CCL-186

Figures

Figure Philosophy

Cell papers are figure-heavy with extensive multi-panel figures:

  • 6-8 main figures typical
  • Multi-panel format: 6-12 panels per figure common
  • Data-dense: Comprehensive experimental support
  • Extended Data: Supplementary figures for additional validation

Panel Labeling

Panels labeled with lowercase letters: (A), (B), (C)

Figure Legend Format

Figure 3. FOXO4 Sequesters p53 in the Nucleus of Senescent Cells

(A) Immunofluorescence microscopy of p53 (green) and FOXO4 (red) in 
proliferating (left) and senescent (right) IMR90 cells. DAPI (blue) 
marks nuclei. Scale bar, 10 μm.

(B) Quantification of nuclear p53 intensity in proliferating versus 
senescent cells. Data represent mean ± SEM; n = 3 biological replicates, 
>100 cells per condition. ***p < 0.001, two-tailed Student's t test.

(C and D) Co-immunoprecipitation of FOXO4 and p53 in proliferating (C) 
and senescent (D) cell lysates. IgG, immunoglobulin G control.

(E) Proximity ligation assay for FOXO4-p53 interaction. Red dots indicate 
interaction events. Scale bar, 10 μm.

(F) Model of FOXO4-mediated p53 sequestration in senescent cells.

See also Figure S3 and Table S2.

References

Citation Style

  • Author-year format: (Smith et al., 2023) or Smith et al. (2023)
  • Multiple citations: (Smith et al., 2020; Jones et al., 2021)
  • Two authors: (Smith and Jones, 2023)
  • Three or more: (Smith et al., 2023)

Reference Format

Baker, D.J., Wijshake, T., Tchkonia, T., LeBrasseur, N.K., Childs, B.G., 
van de Sluis, B., Kirkland, J.L., and van Deursen, J.M. (2011). Clearance 
of p16Ink4a-positive senescent cells delays ageing-associated disorders. 
Nature 479, 232236.

Cell Press Journal Comparison

Journal Focus Article Length Figures
Cell Breakthrough biology Long 7-8 main + ED
Neuron Neuroscience Long 6-8 main
Immunity Immunology Medium-Long 6-7 main
Molecular Cell Molecular mechanisms Medium 5-7 main
Developmental Cell Development Medium 5-7 main
Cell Reports Solid science Medium 4-6 main

Common Mistakes

  1. Insufficient mechanism: Describing what happens without how
  2. Under-controlled experiments: Missing key controls
  3. Weak phenotype validation: Single approach instead of multiple
  4. Missing in vivo work: Cell papers often expect animal studies
  5. Incomplete figure panels: Not showing all relevant conditions
  6. Forgetting graphical abstract: Required element
  7. Exceeding highlight character limits: ≤85 characters per bullet

Pre-Submission Checklist

Required Elements

  • Graphical abstract (square format)
  • Highlights (3-4 bullets, ≤85 characters each)
  • eTOC blurb (30-50 words)
  • Summary (≤150 words)
  • Key Resources Table

Content

  • Mechanistic depth throughout
  • Multiple complementary approaches
  • In vivo validation (if applicable)
  • Declarative subheadings
  • Comprehensive figure panels

Style

  • Technical precision in terminology
  • Author-year citations
  • Figure legends complete and standalone
  • STAR Methods properly formatted

See Also

  • venue_writing_styles.md - Master style overview
  • journals_formatting.md - Technical formatting requirements
  • nature_science_style.md - Comparison with Nature/Science style