We conducted ultrastructural analysis of human pheochromocytoma (PC) cells maintained in primary culture for about 10 months. The cells were first isolated by the enzymatic treatment of a surgically resected tissue specimen obtained from a 37-year-old man with PC, a condition which is characterized by elevated blood levels of adrenaline and noradrenaline. It was found that noradrenaline production in the medium continued until the 90th day of culture (1330 pg/ml). The production level decreased to 20 pg/ml on the 180th day, and to 18 pg/ml on the 300th day. Examination under a transmission electron microscope (TEM) at 4 weeks of culture revealed electron-dense granules (about 200 nm in size and, presumably, rich in catecholamines), which were also observed in the tumor cells from the original PC tissue. Neurite-like processes grew at around 1 week of culture, and were still maintained at 6 months of culture. But, after 6 months of culture, the neurite-like processes contained a rosary-like elevated structure, which was suggestive of cell degeneration, as determined by a plasma polymerization replica method and observed with a scanning electron microscope. When cells were examined under the TEM, fewer electron-dense granules were observed in the cell bodies, with more numerous lipofuscin-like granules and filaments. Thus, electron-dense granules, which, presumably, contain catecholamines, were seen in a long-term culture of human PC cells. These granules decreased in number in parallel with the decrease in catecholamine levels in the culture.