Major surface antigens of Bacteroides melaninogenicus subspecies asaccharolyticus were isolated from an outer membrane complex by gentle methods, purified, and characterized immunochemically. A lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was found to be chemically distinct from the LPS of facultative gram-negative bacteria in that it lacked two core sugars, 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate and heptose, as well as β-hydroxymyristic acid, the predominant fatty acid in the lipid A moiety. The LPS was further atypical in that it had a very low level of biologic activity. A capsular polysaccharide was demonstrated morphologically by electron microscopy with ruthenium red staining and a ferritin-labeled antibody technique. This antigen was shown to be subspecies-specific' by indirect immunofluorescence. Antibody to the capsular polysaccharide was measured by an enzyme-linked immunospecific assay. The presence of a relatively impotent LPS and a surface capsular antigen may partly explain the rarity of bacteremia and septic shock due to B. melaninogenicus subspecies asaccharolyticus and the common association of this organism with abscess formation.