THE NUCLEUS 



69 



these statements is furnished by the trypanosomes parasitic in 

 vertebrate blood : on the one hand, these parasites often contain 

 in their cytoplasm so-called ''' chromatoid grains," probably of the 

 nature of volutin (Swellengrebel, 514), which stain in a similar 

 manner to the nucleus ; on the other hand, the nuclei of the 

 parasites react to stains in a manner very different from the 

 nuclei of the blood-cells amongst which* they live. In short, it 

 is not possible to name any stain or class of stains which can be 

 relied upon either to combine with chromatin alone, or to stain 

 chromatin in the same manner and to the same degree, at all times 

 and in all cases* (compare Fig. 33). When, 

 therefore, the adjectives " chromatinic " and 

 " achromatinic " are used in the course of 

 this work, it must be clearly understood 

 that these terms signify that the bodies or 

 substances to w r hich they are applied con- 

 sist or do not consist, as the case may be, 

 of chrornatiii, and not that they stain or 

 do not stain with certain dyes. 



As regards the chemical nature of chro- 

 matin, it is characterized by containing 



protein-substances more complex in com- FIG. 33. Diagram to repre- 

 position than any other part of the cell ; it 

 is not possible to say defimtely, however, 

 whether it is to be regarded as a single 

 chemical substance or as a combination or 

 mixture of several. Its most salient feature 

 is its variability ; judged by microchemical 

 tests, no two samples of chromatin can be 

 considered identical hi composition, whether 

 from different cells or even from the same 

 cell at different times. Certain substances, 

 especially phosphorus-compounds, are espe- 

 cially characteristic of iiucleo-proteins, but 

 it is not possible at the present time to 

 define or identify chromatin by its chemical 

 properties or composition. 



All experience at the present time tends to show that the final 

 test for the identification of chromatin in the cell is its relation to 

 the vital activities and life-history of the organism. The term 

 " chromatin " is thus to be regarded as denoting a biological or 

 physiological, but not a chemico-physical, unity. A given body 



* Methyl-green, acidulated with acetic acid, has sometimes been indicated as a 

 most distinctively nuclear stain ; but Hertwig (64) has shown that in the nuclei 

 of ActinospJicerium this stain colours the plastin-framework, and not the 

 matin, and this author casts doubt on the alleged value of this stain as 

 for demonstrating chromatin in the nucleus. 



sent in a graphic manneg 

 the action of colouring 

 matters that stain chrr- 

 rnatin. The circle drawn 

 with an uninterrupted line 

 is supposed to represent 

 a theoretically perfect 

 chromatin - stain, which 

 would stain chromatin 

 always, and nothing else 

 but chromatin ; the circles 

 drawn with interrupted 

 lines represent the action 

 of chromatin stains actu- 

 ally ; they will stain chro- 

 matin as a general rule, 

 though notin variably, but 

 they will also stain other 

 things which are not chro- 

 matin. 



