This strain, NRL 32165, did not produce detectable acid from glucose, maltose, sucrose, fructose, mannitol, or lactose in either cystine Trypticase agar (BBL Microbiology Systems, Cockeysville, Md.) or modified oxidation-fermentation medium and was identified presumptively as a glucose-negative Neisseria gonorrhoeae strain, but was identified later as Neisseria cinerea on the basis of its biochemical reactions. Nitrate was not reduced, nitrite (0.001%, wt/vol) was reduced, and polysaccharide was not produced from sucrose. Proline, arginine, and cystine-cysteine were required for growth on defined medium. Strain NRL 32165 did not react with antigonococcal protein I monoclonal antibodies and did not produce immunoglobulin A protease. In DNA:DNA homology studies with N. gonorrhoeae NRL 8038 (F62) and N. cinerea type strain NRL 30003, strain NRL 32165 showed 95% homology relative to N. cinerea and 44% homology relative to N. gonorrhoeae. Thus, the identity of strain NRL 32165 was confirmed as N. cinerea (von Lingelsheim 1906) Murray 1939. Of all Neisseria spp., N. cinerea is most likely to be misidentified as a glucose-negative N. gonorrhoeae strain. Commensal colistin-susceptible Neisseria spp. and Branhamella catarrhalis are only rarely isolated on media selective for the pathogenic Neisseria spp., Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis, and are differentiated on the basis of their cultural characteristics, distinctive sugar utilization reactions, ability to reduce nitrate, and ability to produce polysaccharide from sucrose. According to current literature (23, 33), among commensal species isolated from humans, only Neisseria flavescens and B. catarrhalis are asaccharolytic. Another asaccharolytic Neisseria sp., Neisseria cinerea, was first described by von Lingelsheim in 1906 (35) and named Micrococcus cinereius. It was described subsequently as Neisseria pseudocatarrhalis (F. M. Huntoon, Abstr.