Rat-mouse hybridoma cells producing anti-mouse IgE antibodies were intraperitoneally or subcutaneously inoculated into newborn or suckling hamsters receiving rabbit anti-hamster thymocyte globulin from the day of birth twice a week for at least 3 weeks. The hybridoma cells were found to grow in the abdominal cavity of the hamsters as ascites tumor or in subcutaneous tissue as solid tumor without loss of antibody-secreting activities. For the production of ascites, 2-week-old hamsters were preferable to newborn hamsters. In 3-week-old hamsters, the hybridoma cells could scarcely survive. The antibody titers of the ascites were determined to be 10(5)-10(6) in the ELISA and in the ability to neutralize the skin-sensitizing capacity of mouse IgE antibodies. The rat monoclonal antibodies were easily separated from ascites, serum or cell culture supernatant with affinity chromatography using Affigel protein A-Sepharose and anti-hamster IgG-Sepharose columns. The described method could be efficiently applicable for the proliferation of other hybridomas, such as human-human, human-mouse or hamster-mouse, etc.