Establishment of Two Cell Lines from Syrian Hamster Embryonic Tissue in vitro
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Tohoku University Medical Press in The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 86 (4) , 380-393
- https://doi.org/10.1620/tjem.86.380
Abstract
Two cell lines were established in vitro from Syrian hamster embryos. The shift of biological characteristics, such as cell morphology, growth rate, the ability to grow at low inoculation density, chromosome constitution and tumor-producing capacity was examined for 10 months. The growth rate upon successive transfers declined slowly and about 3 months after the initial cultures cellular growth stopped. Thereafter colonial growth was performed and the growth rate began to rise which soon reached a value higher than that at the culture onset. No distinctive morphological alteration was observed after the colony formation. Chromosomal studies indicated that the cells before the phase of declining growth rate were diploid, but after colony formation, the population shifted to the hyperdiploid range. The cells implanted periodically into isologous hamsters never gave tumors.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Observations on the Chromosomes of Chinese Hamster Cells in Tissue Culture2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1958
- Comparative Chromosomal Studies on Mammalian Cells in Culture. I. The HeLa Strain and Its Mutant Clonal Derivatives23JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1958
- CHROMOSOME ANALYSIS OF 5 LONG-TERM CELL CULTURE POPULATIONS DERIVED FROM NONLEUKEMIC HUMAN PERIPHERAL BLOOD (DETROIT STRAINS)1958
- Differentiation of "Normal" and Neoplastic Cells Maintained in Tissue Culture by Implantation into Normal Hamsters.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1957
- TRANSFORMATION OF CELLS FROM THE NORMAL HUMAN AMNION INTO ESTABLISHED STRAINS1957
- TRANSFORMATION OF NORMAL CELLS IN TISSUE CULTURE - ITS SIGNIFICANCE RELATIVE TO MALIGNANCY AND VIRUS VACCINE PRODUCTION1957
- Chromosome studies on some human tumors and tissues of normal origin, grown in vivo and in vitro at the Sloan-Kettering InstituteCancer, 1956
- Growth of Human Epidermoid Carcinomas (Strains KB and HeLa) in Hamsters from Tissue Culture Inocula.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1956
- INDUCED MALIGNANCY IN CELLS FROM RAT MYOCARDIUM SUBJECTED TO INTERMITTENT ANAEROBIOSIS DURING LONG PROPAGATION IN VITROThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1953
- Production of Malignancy in vitro. XII. Further Transformations of Mouse Fibroblasts to Sarcomatous CellsJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1950