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Cover: Branching epithelia of a murine embryonic lung at E13.5 visualised by whole-mount immunohistochemistry for E-cadherin and optical projection tomography. During lung branching morphogenesis, newly generated epithelial buds develop into a branched tree-like structure, a process regulated by functional crosstalk with the neighbouring mesenchyme. The putative lung tumour suppressor EPHA3, a receptor tyrosine kinase, is specifically expressed in the embryonic mesenchymal distal lung tissue. Epithelial branching takes place as normal in its absence, possibly implying functional redundancy between EphA family receptors. See article by Lahtela et al. on page 393. - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
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IN THIS ISSUE
SPECIAL ARTICLE
REVIEW
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Modeling autosomal recessive cutis laxa type 1C in mice reveals distinct functions for Ltbp-4 isoforms
Call for papers – In Vitro Models of Human Disease to Inform Mechanism and Drug Discovery

We invite you to submit your latest research to our upcoming special issue: In Vitro Models of Human Disease to Inform Mechanism and Drug Discovery, coordinated by DMM Editor Vivian Li (The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK), alongside Guest Editors Austin Smith (University of Exeter, UK) and Joseph Wu (Stanford University School of Medicine, USA).The deadline for submitting articles is 6 October 2025.
The Company of Biologists Workshops

For the last 15 years, our publisher, The Company of Biologists, has provided an apt environment to inspire biology and support biologists through our Workshops series. Read about the evolution of the Workshop series and revisit JEB's experience with hosting the first Global South Workshop.
Read & Publish Open Access publishing: what authors say

We have had great feedback from authors who have benefitted from our Read & Publish agreement with their institution and have been able to publish Open Access with us without paying an APC. Read what they had to say.
Fast & Fair peer review

Our sister journal Biology Open has recently launched the next phase of their Fast & Fair peer review initiative: offering high-quality peer review within 7 working days. To learn more about BiO’s progress and future plans, read the Editorial by Daniel Gorelick, or visit the Fast & Fair peer review page.
A new perspective on disease research
DMM publishes perspectives - peer-reviewed articles that provide expert analysis of a topic important to the disease research community. Read our collection from authors presenting new or potentially controversial ideas or hypotheses, to help address future challenges and forge new directions.