%0 Journal Article %T Collection of Macaca fascicularis cDNAs derived from bone marrow, kidney, liver, pancreas, spleen, and thymus %A Naoki Osada %A Makoto Hirata %A Reiko Tanuma %A Yutaka Suzuki %A Sumio Sugano %A Keiji Terao %A Jun Kusuda %A Yosuke Kameoka %A Katsuyuki Hashimoto %A Ichiro Takahashi %J BMC Research Notes %D 2009 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1756-0500-2-199 %X We constructed cDNA libraries of Macaca fascicularis, derived from tissues obtained from bone marrow, liver, pancreas, spleen, and thymus of a young male, and kidney of a young female. In total, 5'-end sequences of 56,856 clones were determined. Including the previously established cDNA libraries from brain and testis, we have isolated 112,587 cDNAs of Macaca fascicularis, which correspond to 56% of the curated human reference genes.These sequences were deposited in the public sequence database as well as in-house macaque genome database http://genebank.nibio.go.jp/qfbase/ webcite. These data will become valuable resources for identifying functional parts of the genome of macaque monkeys in future studies.Macaca fascicularis (cynomolgus, crab-eating, or long-tail macaque) is one of the most popular primate species used in biomedical research, and is closely related to Macaca mulatta (rhesus macaque). The draft sequence of the Macaca mulatta genome, which has an evolutionary important position, was published in 2007 [1].Transcriptiome data broadens the application of genome sequences. Compared with several millions of human transcript sequences, macaque transcriptome data has only been analyzed in a limited numbers of studies [2-6]. A complete list of macaque genes will be beneficial for performing genetic studies using macaques in the future. We aim to elucidate all the macaque transcripts that correspond to human genes, which have been widely accepted as reference sequences, such as the RefSeq sequences [7].We have published expressed sequence tag (EST) and full-length sequences, which were obtained from cDNA libraries of brain and testis of Macaca fascicularis, using a variety of research subjects [5,8-13]. Here, we present 5'-EST sequences from six other tissues of Macaca fascicularis. Bone marrow, liver, pancreas, spleen, and thymus from a 4-year-old male Malaysian Macaca fascicularis, and kidney from a 3-year-old female Philippine Macaca fascicularis were harve %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/2/199