Except for Mycoplasma fermentans strain PG 18, single-cell suspensions of M. arthritidis, M. fermentans (ATCC 19989), M. hominis type 1, M. orale types 1 and 2, M. pneumoniae, and M. salivarium were inactivated exponentially by ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, in contrast to broth cultures containing clusters of elementary bodies. The susceptibility of the mycoplasmas was unaffected by storage at 2-4 C and at -70 C, by sonication, and by filtration. The rate of inactivation was dependent on the intensity of the radiations but independent of the concentration of the cells. Therefore, single-cell suspensions of these mycoplasmas could be differentiated from aggregates of cells by exponential inactivation of the colony-forming units (CFU). By this criterion, the CFU of M. arthritidis in the exponential phase of growth consisted of single cells, in contrast to the other species in which the CFU contained two or more elementary bodies. Even though the cultures of M. fermentans (PG 18) were grown from single cells, they were not homogeneous in their susceptibility to UV light. Neither were cultures of M. arthritidis and M. orale type 1 grown from single cells which had survived irradiation.