01949nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653001200055653001100067653001100078653001200089653000900101653003200110653002900142653002500171100001900196245005100215300001100266490000700277050003200284520137700316022001401693 1980 d c1980 Oct10aAnimals10aFemale10aHumans10aleprosy10aMice10aMicrobial Sensitivity Tests10aMycobacterium Infections10aMycobacterium leprae1 aChatterjee B R00aCultivable precursors of Mycobacterium leprae. a513-260 v52 aInfolep Library - available3 a

During attempts at test tube culture of M. leprae in our laboratory we have repeatedly isolated a non-acid fast, coccoid organism from lepromatous tissue and skin smears (Chatterjee, 1976). These organisms show a tendency to generate acid fast mycobacteria in test tube passages and in mice experimentally infected with these organisms, and a number of stable, pigmented mycobacterial cultures have been obtained from them that are being maintained in test tube media. In the first report cited above it was postulated that these coccoid organisms of leprous origin were a cultivable precursor phase of the non-cultivable M. leprae, and further that M. leprae was a pleomorphic organism that has a cultivable non-mycobacterial phase (Chatterjee, 1978). Since these reports, further studies have been made on these precursor organisms, as well as mycobacteria that either grew out of the coccoid precursors, or isolated in pure culture form lepromatous tissues and appeared to be identical. This paper deals with the biochemical and drug sensitivity patterns, and infectivity in experimentally inoculated mice, of a few of these non-acid fast coccoid strains, and their mycobacterial progenies, i.e, mycobacterial converts from the coccoids, and a few mycobacterial strains isolated straight away from lepromatous nodules that showed quite identical characteristics.

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