Morphological, Biological and Antigenic Properties of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Adapted to Growth in Guinea-Pig Subcutaneous Chambers

Abstract
SUMMARY: Gonococci (strain BS3) passaged three times and harvested directly from plastic chambers implanted subcutaneously in guinea pigs were compared with the parent strain (BS) grown in vitro. The strain grown in vivo produced smaller colonies than that grown in vitro and when examined directly in chamber fluid was sometimes not pilated. It was more resistant to the bactericidal action of human serum and more infective for guinea-pig chambers. In gel diffusion, extracts of the organisms adapted in vivo and cultured once on agar appeared to contain one or two antigens that were different from those in extracts of the in vitro grown organisms; and on polyacrylamide gels, electrophoresis of similar extracts showed one or more protein components for strain BS3 which were not seen for strain BS. Gonococci grown in guinea-pig subcutaneous chambers appear to be suitable for studies on the determinants of gonococcal pathogenicity.