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Trichloroacetic Acid

Fixing Agent

Trichloroacetic Acid

Synonyms:

Chemical Formula:

CCl3COOH

State: Powder
Concentration: About 2%
Fixation Time: A few hours
Aftertreatment: None
Additive: Yes
Coagulant: Yes
Hardens: Yes

Description

Trichloroacetic acid is a strong protein precipitant and is used in that capacity in other laboratory disciplines. In histotechnology it is used as a fixing agent in a few mixturess, but is not especially common. It causes some swelling of tissues and is sometimes incorporated to reduce shrinkage from other ingredients. It is not a dangerous chemical and the usual laboratory practices that should be used to handle all chemicals are all that is required.

How it Fixes

Proteins

Kiernan says that it likely fixes as a consequence of reactions between the negatively charged chloroacetate anion and positively charged amino groups of proteins. Other than that, there is very little information available about it. Carbohydrates and lipids do not appear to be affected.

Morphology

It is not used alone, but mixtures containing it preserve morphology satisfactorily.

Time

A few hours.

Simple Solution

It is not used alone for fixation, but is incorporated into fixative mixtures, the most widely known being Heidenhain’s SuSa.

Aftertreatment

No specific aftertreatment.

References

  1. Kiernan, J.A., (1999)
    Histological and histochemical methods, theory and practice. Ed. 3,
    Butterworth, Heinemann, Oxford, UK.