Hi Laura,
Thanks a bunch for digging this up. I don’t blame you for not reading it in
detail! I did look through it and unfortunately didn’t come up with any leads
on what I’m interested in, but it does give me another source to look around
for the info I hope to find.
Cheers,
Brian
> On Apr 24, 2019, at 4:59 PM, Bover,Laura <email obscured>> wrote:
>
> Hi Brian,
> I found this very old document. It should be an update I guess because for
other policies are updates every year or so.
> https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-CA-99-005.html
> Let me know if this is useful. When I search for cDNA other documents pop-up
but more specific such as for Zebrafish or profiling the nervous system. They
look more like protocols or rules. And being so old (1999), several things
could change.
> Sorry, I didn't read in more details and I apologize if it is not what you
are looking for.
> Thanks!
> Laura
>
> Laura Bover, PhD
> Professor
> Director Monoclonal Antibody Core Facility
> University of Texas M.D.Anderson Cancer Center
> Associate member of The University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical
Sciences at Houston
Rest of post
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> Member of the Steering Committee of the Immunology Program GSBS
> Immunology Department/ Genomics Medicine Department
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> <email obscured>
>
>
>
> On 4/24/19, 5:52 AM, "Brian Hampton" <email obscured>> wrote:
>
> WARNING: This email originated from outside of MD Anderson. Please
validate the sender's email address before clicking on links or attachments as
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>
> Hello all,
>
> Is there a resource that details what journals or funding agencies require
for publishing data that utilizes cDNA clones? I've done a brief search of
various journal's instructions for authors and came up empty.
>
> I am surprised that I haven't easily found at least minimal requirements
to submit as supplementary or to make available upon request, the data that
proves that the cDNA used in the experiments has the correct/desired nucleotide
sequence.
>
> Given the fundamental role of the cDNA cloned into expression vectors have
in so many experimental approaches which are used to determine the function of
gene products in biological processes, I would think that it should be an
explicit requirement to provide this basic evidence - that what you are
transfecting into cells is what you say it is.
>
> Thanks in advance for any input,
>
> Brian
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