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Y. Ohnuki

Researcher at Huntington Medical Research Institutes

Publications -  10
Citations -  1948

Y. Ohnuki is an academic researcher from Huntington Medical Research Institutes. The author has contributed to research in topics: Karyotype & Cell culture. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 1878 citations.

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Journal Article

Establishment and characterization of a human prostatic carcinoma cell line (PC-3).

TL;DR: The establishment, characterization, and tumorigenicity of a new epithelial cell line (PC-3) from a human prostatic adenocarcinoma metastatic to bone is reported, which should be useful in investigating the biochemical changes in advanced prostatic cancer cells and in assessing their response to chemotherapeutic agents.
Journal Article

Chromosomal Analysis of Human Prostatic Adenocarcinoma Cell Lines

TL;DR: Banding analysis of PC-5-PI isolated from primary prostatic adenocarcinoma indicated that this line also had a characteristic karyotype with 28% pseudodiploid and 72% pseudotetraploid components.
Journal Article

Development of Tumorigenicity in Simian Virus 40-immortalized Human Bronchial Epithelial Cell Lines

TL;DR: From the clonally derived BEAS-2B cell line, cell populations with various degrees of tumorigenicity have developed and this finding supports the hypothesis that development of resistance to inducers of terminal squamous differentiation may be a step in the process of bronchial carcinogenesis.
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Selective growth of normal adult human urothelial cells in serum-free medium

TL;DR: It was observed that primary outgrowths, secondary cultures, and even cryopreserved cells all retained the capacity to respond to high Ca2+ and serum by differentiation and desquamation, resulting in the availability of easily obtainable serum-free epithelial cultures from normal adult human ureter and bladder.
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Differential properties among clones of simian virus 40-transformed human epithelial cells.

TL;DR: Monolayer cultures of human prostatic epithelial cells were exposed to SV40 virus at 35th population doubling and transformed lines were found to have altered morphology, ultrastructure, chromosomes, and growth behavior.