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Cell Host & Microbe pre-submission review

Free readiness scan for Cell Host & Microbe.

Cell Press's flagship for host-microbe biology publishes mechanistic studies that reveal how pathogens, commensals, and symbionts interact with their hosts. If your work doesn't explain the how and why of a microbial interaction, it won't make it past the editors here.

Upload your manuscript and see the first desk-rejection risks, journal-fit verdict, and top reviewer objections calibrated for Cell Host & Microbe in about 1-2 minutes.

Impact factor

18.7

Acceptance

~12%

First decision

30-45 days to first decision

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What Cell Host & Microbe editors screen for

The signals Cell Host & Microbe rewards before the first reviewer

The readiness scan checks your manuscript against these first.

Mechanistic depth over phenomenology

CHM editors consistently reject papers that observe an interaction without explaining it. You can't just show that knocking out a bacterial gene reduces virulence; you need to identify the host target, map the interaction domain, and ideally demonstrate sufficiency with reconstitution experiments. Papers that stop at 'this gene matters' don't cut it. The editors want the full molecular story, from first contact to downstream consequence.

Bidirectional perspective

The journal's name says it all: host AND microbe. Papers that only examine the host response without characterizing the microbial side, or vice versa, often get redirected to more specialized journals. Your work should address both partners in the interaction. If you've only done host-side experiments, you'll need compelling evidence about the microbial factors driving that response.

Relevance to infection biology or health

Pure basic science is welcome, but it needs to connect to real-world infection or health contexts. A beautiful structural study of a bacterial protein won't land here unless you demonstrate its role during actual infection. Editors look for in vivo validation, clinical relevance, or clear implications for understanding disease. Work that's purely biochemical without biological context belongs in different journals.

Common Cell Host & Microbe rejection patterns

Named failure modes the scan looks for

These are patterns Cell Host & Microbe editors flag in initial triage. The free preview surfaces when your manuscript shows them.

Pattern 1

Submitting microbiome studies without causal evidence

The field has moved past 16S surveys showing correlations between microbial composition and disease states. CHM specifically wants mechanistic microbiome work. If you haven't done fecal transplants, gnotobiotic experiments, or identified specific metabolites and their host receptors, your paper will be desk-rejected as descriptive. The editors see dozens of correlation studies weekly; they're looking for causation.

Pattern 2

Presenting pathogen-centric work without host context

A common error is submitting excellent microbiology that doesn't address the host side. You might have solved the structure of a virulence factor or dissected its biochemistry, but if you can't show what it does to host cells during infection, CHM isn't the right venue. The journal's identity depends on that bidirectional focus. Send pure pathogen mechanistic work to journals like PLoS Pathogens or Molecular Microbiology.

Pattern 3

Over-relying on immortalized cell lines

Reviewers at CHM have become increasingly skeptical of HeLa cells, HEK293s, and other standard lines that may not reflect real host biology. If your entire story relies on these systems without validation in primary cells, organoids, or animal models, you'll face major revision requests. The editors have explicitly pushed for more physiologically relevant models, and reviewers now flag this routinely.

Common questions about Cell Host & Microbe submissions

Does the scan understand Cell Host & Microbe's editorial standards?

The readiness scan is calibrated to Cell Host & Microbe's scope and review signals. It estimates desk-rejection risk against known triage patterns, flags where your manuscript sits against journal fit, and surfaces the specific reviewer objections most likely to come up.

How long does the Cell Host & Microbe scan take?

The free preview takes about 1-2 minutes once you upload. If you want the full diagnostic with verified citations and section-by-section critique, it is delivered as a DOCX within 30 minutes.

Is my manuscript safe?

Yes. Uploads are encrypted in transit, not used to train any AI model, and deleted after analysis. No human reads your manuscript on the AI path.

Where can I read more about Cell Host & Microbe?

See the full Cell Host & Microbe submission guide for scope details, insider tips, and acceptance-rate context. Or see how the AI diagnostic works across all journals.

Find out before Cell Host & Microbe's editors do

Your reviewers will find these issues. The question is whether you find them first. Free preview in 1-2 minutes.

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