Pathogens Species of this genus (family Neisseriaceae) of parasitic bacteria grow in pairs and occasionally fours, and thrive best at 98.6 °F (37 °C) in the animal body or serum media. The genus includes: •
N. gonorrhoeae (also called the
gonococcus) causes
gonorrhea. •
N. meningitidis (also called the meningococcus) is one of the most common causes of bacterial
meningitis and the causative agent of meningococcal
septicaemia. The immune system's
neutrophils are restricted in function due to the ability of
Neisseria to evade
opsonization by antibodies, and to replicate within neutrophils despite
phagocytosis.
Neisseria species are also able to alter their antigens to avoid being engulfed by a process called
antigenic variation, which is observed primarily in surface-located molecules. The
pathogenic species along with some
commensal species, have
type IV pili which serve multiple functions for this organism. Some functions of the type IV pili include: mediating attachment to various cells and tissues, twitching motility, natural competence,
microcolony formation, extensive intrastrain phase, and antigenic variation.
Neisseria bacteria have also been shown to be an important factor in the early stages of canine plaque development. File:Neisseria phylogenetic tree.png|left|thumb|Phylogenetic tree of selected
Neisseria species, based on concatenating the DNA sequences of all 896 core Neisseria genes, from Marri et al. 2010 ==Biochemical identification==