Abstract

AbstractDuring a period of 2 1/2 years, 33 spontaneous reticulum‐cell sarcomas arose in our colony of golden hamsters. One of the tumors, made transplantable in the solid and the ascitic form, is described with regard to behavior in homologous hosts and to cytogenetic characteristics. During four years of transplantation, the tumor changed its pattern of growth and, after an initial phase of localized growth, displayed a leukemialike mode of spread resulting in the death of the hosts on the 6th or 7th day irrespective of site of transplantation. Animals of the same passage reacted differently to tumor implantation: some hamsters developed large tumors without tumor cell spread, others showed very small tumors with heavy tumor cell dissemination. These different modes of growth are assumed to be dependent on host factors.Chromosome analyses were carried out on tumor cells of different transplantation generations. The chromosomes in cells of the 38th generation did not differ from normal hamster cells, except for a higher variation in the number of chromosomes. Within the next 15 passages the karyotype changed considerably, but from then on remained stable with a stemline of 44 chromosomes and six markers. The late replication pattern of sex chromosomes and of most of the autosomes seems to be the same for both normal hamster cells and tumor cells.The DNA content of the tumor cells was found to correspond to the modal chromosome number.No causal relationship between changes in growth characteristics and in karyotype could be established.

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