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First Department of Pathology, Nara Medical University, Kashihara, Nara, 634 Japan [Y. H., N. K., Y. K., N. E., T. S.], and Cancer Research Center, Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514 [J-C. L.]
Transplantable renal adenocarcinoma can be readily induced in Wistar strain male rats by initiation with N-ethyl-N-hydroxyethylnitrosamine followed by promotion with ß-cyclodextrin. The transplantability rates of the tumors by s.c. inoculation in newborn rats were 33 and 50%, respectively, for tumors of the first and second passages, and 100% for both third and fourth passages. The transplantability rates were affected by route of inoculation; rates of 50 and 100% were observed for s.c. and i.p. inoculations, respectively. The growth rate of tumors induced by i.p. inoculation was 3-fold higher than that induced by s.c. injection. Macroscopically, most of the tumors grew in the s.c. tissue of inoculation sites. However, invasive growth of tumors in spleen, liver, stomach, peritoneum, and intestine were seen in 50% of the animals inoculated i.p.; metastatic cancers to lung were seen in 16%. Histologically, the tumors were well-differentiated adenocarcinomas composed of uniform cells resembling kidney tubular cells and appeared to be derived from normal kidney tissues. A 5-fold decrease in
-glutamyl transferase activity in tumor tissues was found as compared with that of nontumorous kidney tissues. Electrophoretic analysis of cellular proteins in polyacrylamide gels revealed that tumor tissues exhibited five new polypeptides with molecular weights of 81,000, 64,000, 59,000, 50,000, and 36,000 which were either lacking or undetectable in the nontumourous area and control kidney. In addition, protein banding patterns of transplantable renal tumor appeared to be more heterogeneous than those of primary kidney tumor.
1 This work was supported by Grants in Aid for Cancer Research from the Ministry of Health and Welfare in Japan (56 shi-2, 58-39) and from the Incentive Wage System in Nara Medical University, and by Institutional Grant IN-15W from the American Cancer Society.
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed.
Received 8/11/83. Accepted 12/ 7/83.
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