International Journal of Molecular Medicine is an international journal devoted to molecular mechanisms of human disease.
International Journal of Oncology is an international journal devoted to oncology research and cancer treatment.
Covers molecular medicine topics such as pharmacology, pathology, genetics, neuroscience, infectious diseases, molecular cardiology, and molecular surgery.
Oncology Reports is an international journal devoted to fundamental and applied research in Oncology.
Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine is an international journal devoted to laboratory and clinical medicine.
Oncology Letters is an international journal devoted to Experimental and Clinical Oncology.
Explores a wide range of biological and medical fields, including pharmacology, genetics, microbiology, neuroscience, and molecular cardiology.
International journal addressing all aspects of oncology research, from tumorigenesis and oncogenes to chemotherapy and metastasis.
Multidisciplinary open-access journal spanning biochemistry, genetics, neuroscience, environmental health, and synthetic biology.
Open-access journal combining biochemistry, pharmacology, immunology, and genetics to advance health through functional nutrition.
Publishes open-access research on using epigenetics to advance understanding and treatment of human disease.
An International Open Access Journal Devoted to General Medicine.
Mol Med Rep 12: [Related article:] 5746–5752, 2015; DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2015.4193
Following the publication of this article on-line ahead of print, an interested reader drew to our attention some anomalies associated with the presentation of Fig. 1. In the lower panel, the fourth image from the left resembled a mirror image representation of the image in the first panel; the fifth image from the left bore a marked resemblance to a section of the third image, albeit displaced at an angle and with a different magnification; and an internal office investigation drew our attention to the fact that the sixth image in the upper panel resembled a section of the image in the third panel, although rotated through 180°.
The authors presented all the images of immunofluorescence to the editor, and acknowledge that mistakes occurred during the compilation of the Figure. In the present experiment, high-intensity specific immunoreactive signals among different groups were being compared. The original data were reexamined, and the same conclusion was borne out, that the signal associated with Cx43 and p-Cx43 decreased, and the distribution of the signal became more heterogeneous, in correlation with the duration of ventricular fibrillation. These errors in the compilation of the Figure arose as a consequence of a lack of communication between the first two authors listed on the paper, and further inadequacies in our data handling. A corrected version of Fig. 1 is presented below, with the correct data shown for the third and sixth images from the left in the upper panel, and the first, third, fourth and fifth images from the left in the lower panel. The authors deeply regret these errors, and apologize for any inconvenience caused.