Page:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Vol 60.djvu/376

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On the Growth of the Blastoderm of the Chick.
349

allied chemical constitution are heated together in sealed tubes with an excess of either phosphorus pentacliloride or pentoxide, a series of colloidal substances are formed which, when freed from the contaminating phosphoric acid, and dissolved in concentrated ammonia, give opalescent solutions that, on evaporating down , yield substances closely resembling in physical, chemical, and physiological properties certain proteids.

These colloidal substances, although they differ from one another in minor details, are usually distinguished by the following characteristics :—

1. They are soluble in warm water, forming opalescent laevorotatory solutions.

2. The resulting solutions yield the principal colour reactions hitherto deemed diagnostic of proteids.

3. In the absence of salts, solutions of these colloids do not coagulate on heating. In the presence of a trace of a neutral salt they coagulate on heating at temperatures very similar to proteid solutions.

4. Fractional heat-coagulation shows the colloidal solutions are a mixture of different substances.

5. The different constituents of the colloidal solution exhibit different physiological action.

6. In the presence of an excess of neutral salts, or of salts of the heavy metals, the colloidal solutions behave in a manner similar to proteid solutions.

7. When introduced into the circulation of pigmented rabbits, dogs, and cats, certain of these substances (viz., the colloids designated A, B, C, at and /3) produce intravascular coagulation of the blood m a manner similar to a nucleo-proteid. They also hasten the coagulability of the blood withdrawn from the carotid, and will, when slowly injected intravenously in minute quantities into dogs, produce a retardation of the coagulability of the intravascular blood, ., a “ negative phase.”

8. Apparently these colloidal substances are, owing to both their physical and chemical properties and their physiological behaviour, the nearest synthesised bodies at present known to proteids.

"An Experimental Examination into the Growth of the Blastoderm of the Chick.” By Richard Assheton, M.A. Comnnmicated by Adam Sedgwick, F.R.S. Received November 12,—Read December 10, 1896.

In making an experimental study of the growth of the blastoderm of the chick, I had two chief objects in viewr :