Abstract
In order to study the occurence of swollen and disrupted mitochondria in tissue preserved for electron microscopy by ordinary fixation methods, liver tissue from miniature pig fetuses was immersion-fixed in fixatives with various types and concentrations of fixing agents and vehicles. Also commercial and purified products have been tested, different fixation times and temperatures as well as the consequences of a short rinsing in buffer solutions prior to fixation. Furthermore, the significance of delayed fixation (autolysis) was studied. It was found that swollen and disrupted mitochondria occur predominantly in liver cells exposed to low concentrations of glutaraldehyde. It is shown that this phenomenon is a result of a specific effect of glutaraldehyde on the mitochondrial membranes. It is not accompanied by parallel changes of other organelles or nuclei, and it is not provoked by other fixing agents, vehicles or by delayed fixation (autolysis).