On average, 15 per cent of the total haemoglobin present in the blood of the newt Triturus cristatus was extracted during 45 minutes of fixation in Palade-Caulfield fixative. This extraction was reduced with fixatives buffered at pH 6.2 instead of pH 7.4. The addition of Ca++ ions to a final concentration of 0.01 M in the fixative completely suppressed haemoglobin extraction. The effect of the pH, and the presence or absence of Ca++ ions in the fixative, on the rate of haemoglobin extraction has been determined. During Palade-Caulfield fixation the average projected area of newt erythrocytes increased by 37 per cent, and after dehydration and embedding in Epon the average area was 25 per cent greater than that of the unfixed cell. Fixatives buffered at pH 6.2 and containing 0.01 M Ca++ ions caused cellular shrinkage, with the average projected area decreasing by 10 per cent in the fixative. This shrinkage continued during dehydration, and the final average area of the erythrocytes in Epon was 26 per cent less than that of the unfixed cells. Similar measurements with erythrocytes of Amphiuma tridactylum showed that after Palade-Caulfield fixation the average cellular area was increased by 45 per cent, and after dehydration and embedding in Araldite it was 36 per cent greater than that of the unfixed cell. The average nuclear area increased by 35 per cent during fixation but after embedding it was 26 per cent greater than that of the unfixed nuclei. With a fixative at pH 6.2 containing 0.01 M Ca++ ions, both the nucleus and the whole cell shrank during fixation. The nuclear area decreased by 20 per cent and the cellular area by 22 per cent. After dehydration and embedding in Araldite, the average nuclear area had decreased by 35 per cent and the cellular area by 40 per cent. It has been shown that OsO4 fixation lowers the isoelectric points of haemoglobins and other proteins. This finding has been used in the interpretation of the observed cellular changes resulting from fixation.

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