Abstract

A diploid cell line from a male embryo of Microtus agrestis has been established. The culture techniques and pertinent morphological and molecular characteristics of the cell line are described. The cells have been in culture for 130 passages and maintain a normal diploid karyotype as judged by the standard and G banding chromosome techniques. The two giant sex chromosomes are visualized in interphase as two long heterochromatic fibers and the study of the repetitive DNA content of total chromatin, constitutive heterochromatin and euchromatin yielded similar results to those previously found in this laboratory for liver and brain of the same species. The use of this cell line as a model for the understanding of mammalian heterochromatin and for the localization of the site of integration of oncogenic viruses in a specific chromatin fraction is discussed.

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