Literature DB >> 21503772

Modeling man: the monkey colony at the Carnegie Institution of Washington's Department of Embryology, 1925-1971.

Emily K Wilson1.   

Abstract

Though better recognized for its immediate endeavors in human embryo research, the Carnegie Department of Embryology also employed a breeding colony of rhesus macaques for the purposes of studying human reproduction. This essay follows the course of the first enterprise in maintaining a primate colony for laboratory research and the overlapping scientific, social, and political circumstances that tolerated and cultivated the colony's continued operation from 1925 until 1971. Despite a new-found priority for reproductive sciences in the United States, by the early 1920s an unfertilized human ovum had not yet been seen and even the timing of ovulation remained unresolved. Progress would require an organized research approach that could extend beyond the limitations of working with scant and inherently restrictive human subjects or with common lab mammals like mice. In response, the Department of Embryology, under the Carnegie Institution of Washington (CIW), instituted a novel methodology using a particular primate species as a surrogate in studying normal human reproductive physiology. Over more than 40 years the monkey colony followed an unpremeditated trajectory that would contribute fundamentally to discoveries in human reproduction, early embryo development, reliable birth control methods, and to the establishment of the rhesus macaque as a common model organism.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 21503772     DOI: 10.1007/s10739-011-9282-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Biol        ISSN: 0022-5010            Impact factor:   1.326


  15 in total

1.  Producing development: The anatomy of human embryos and the norms of Wilhelm His.

Authors:  N Hopwood
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 1.314

2.  "Properly disposed of": a history of embryo disposal and the changing claims on fetal remains.

Authors:  Lynn M Morgan
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2002 Jul-Dec

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Journal:  Fertil Steril       Date:  1959 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 7.329

4.  Circulation in the maternal placenta of primates.

Authors:  E M RAMSEY
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  1954-01       Impact factor: 8.661

5.  A history of normal plates, tables and stages in vertebrate embryology.

Authors:  Nick Hopwood
Journal:  Int J Dev Biol       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 2.203

6.  Classics revisited: the Yale embryo. 1938.

Authors:  E M Ramsey
Journal:  Placenta       Date:  1991 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.481

7.  PROVISION FOR THE STUDY OF MONKEYS AND APES.

Authors:  R M Yerkes
Journal:  Science       Date:  1916-02-18       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  IN VITRO FERTILIZATION AND CLEAVAGE OF HUMAN OVARIAN EGGS.

Authors:  J Rock; M F Menkin
Journal:  Science       Date:  1944-08-04       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  What was the evolutionary synthesis?

Authors:  E Mayr
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  1993-01       Impact factor: 17.712

10.  Human guinea pigs: medical experimentation before World War II. [Review of: Lederer SE. Subjected to science: human experimentation in America before the Second World War. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995].

Authors:  D Rosner
Journal:  Rev Am Hist       Date:  1996-12
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  3 in total

1.  Transcriptome profiling of individual rhesus macaque oocytes and preimplantation embryos.

Authors:  James L Chitwood; Victoria R Burruel; Michelle M Halstead; Stuart A Meyers; Pablo J Ross
Journal:  Biol Reprod       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 4.285

2.  Between Simians and Cell Lines: Rhesus Monkeys, Polio Research, and the Geopolitics of Tissue Culture (1934-1954).

Authors:  Tara Suri
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 0.818

3.  The rhesus macaque as a success story of the Anthropocene.

Authors:  Eve B Cooper; Lauren J N Brent; Noah Snyder-Mackler; Mewa Singh; Asmita Sengupta; Sunil Khatiwada; Suchinda Malaivijitnond; Zhou Qi Hai; James P Higham
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 8.713

  3 in total

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