Vysotskiĭ V V, Ruzal' G I, Galeeva O P, Smirnova-Mutusheva M A
Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol. 1986 Jan(1):40-4.
Some details of the ultrastructure of several meningococcal strains having had contacts with cells in continuous human amnion cell culture FL for 6 hours to 2 days have been defined with greater precision by means of electron microscopy. The study has shown that the contact of meningococci with the tissue culture is accompanied by the appearance of meningococcal forms with the defective cell wall, similar to L-forms: spheroplast, protoplast, gigantic cells and microcells, as well as budding variants. The meningococcal variants with the defective cell wall, appearing in the cell culture, and the forms occurring (in different proportions) in "ripe" meningococcal populations developing in the culture media for a long time and isolated from a human body have been found to have no essential differences in their fine structure. These data indicate that any external influences (meningococci are highly sensitive to such influences) produce sufficiently rapid changes, similar to L-transformation, in the fine structure of these microorganisms.