Synergistic effects of combinations of anti-mycobacterial drugs on Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) in vitro was studied by radiometric respirometry. Pronounced synergy was seen for several drug combinations where ethambutol was found to be the key drug in the synergistic potentiation. Microcalorimetric studies show that a very rapid physico-chemical interaction occurs between the cell-surface of MAC and ethambutol. When MAC cells were pretreated with ethambutol and then subjected to streptomycin the thermal response significantly differed from that seen with MAC cells which had not been pretreated. The typical thermal effects of the interaction of ethambutol with live and UV-killed MAC cells was not seen with heat-killed MAC cells. It is proposed that specific cell-surface protein(s) act as receptors in the initial interaction with ethambutol.