A human carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)‐producing cell line, T3M‐4, has been established from explant cultures of a primary human pancreatic exocrine adenocarcinoma transplanted into nude mice. The tumor had metastasized in the patient. The tumor obtained from metastatic lymph nodes was the initial source for implantation in athymic nude mice. In the primary culture, host fibroblasts were eliminated by the use of the antiserum raised against nude mouse cells. T3M‐4 cells have been continuously propagated in vitro during the past 26 months. The cells grew in a monolayered sheet with about 31 hours of population doubling time. The cells exhibited epithelial morphologic features resembling the structure of the original tumor, and they showed tumor takes when inoculated into athymic nude mice. Xenografts established from the cell line have retained a similar histology to the original tumor on serial transplantation. Chromosomal analysis revealed the cell line to be a human aneuploid one with a hyperdiploid mode. T3M‐4 cells possess the characteristic function of CEA secretion in vitro in culture and in vivo in nude mice bearing the tumors produced by inoculation with the cultured cells. In view of these characteristics, T3M‐4 cell line represents a new human pancreatic exocrine adenocarcinoma cell line that produces CEA.
ABSTRACT. The authors examined testis tissues and blood which were collected from free-ranging Japanese monkeys of the Takasakiyama troop during four periods in 1971 (mating season: late January-early February; early birth season: June; late birth season: August; and intermediate season between birth season and mating season: October), and studied their sexual maturation and seasonal changes in reproductive phenomena.Results of observations on the testis and plasma testosterone concentration were in agreement with each other. Except in a few cases, the testis was infantile until October at 4 years old and developed rapidly during the following two months, and spermatogenesis started in the mating season at 4 years old (in exceptional cases, it started one year earlier). After the following two-year process of sexual maturation, monkeys attained full maturation in the mating season at 6 years old.For seasonal changes in reproductive phenomena also, results of observations on the testis and the plasma testosterone were in agreement with each other. Activity of the testis repeated an annual cycle of being maximal in the mating season, regressing in the birth season, and redeveloping toward the following mating season. Such seasonal changes were noticeably observed with 4-to 6-year-old animals, which are in the process of sexual maturation.
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