Benjamin Lewin founded
Cell. He then bought the title and established an independent Cell Press in 1986. The company spun off new journals as follows:
Neuron in March 1988;
Immunity in April 1994; and
Molecular Cell in December 1997. Benjamin Lewin left in October 1999, after having sold Cell Press to
Elsevier the previous April. Since that time, Cell Press has launched a number of new titles:
Developmental Cell in July 2001;
Cancer Cell in February 2002;
Cell Metabolism in January 2005;
Cell Host & Microbe in March 2007;
Cell Stem Cell in July 2007;
Cell Systems in July 2015;
Heliyon 2015;
Chem in July 2016;
Joule in September 2017;
iScience in March 2018; and
One Earth in September 2019.
Cell Genomics was added in 2021. Meanwhile, three additional Elsevier journals have joined the Cell Press group:
Current Biology launched in January 1996, which became part of Cell Press in early 2001;
Structure launched in 1993, which merged with the journal
Folding & Design in early 1999. At that point, the name changed to
Structure with Folding & Design but reverted to
Structure at the beginning of 2001, when the journal joined Cell Press.
Cell Chemical Biology (formerly titled
Chemistry & Biology) launched on April 15, 1994, and joined Cell Press in January 2002. In 2007, Cell Press acquired the
Trends family of journals, 16 review journals covering the life, physical, and medical sciences. In October 1995,
Cell.com was launched and full-text online versions were launched in July 1997. == Open access ==