“…H.8 is interesting for several reasons: (a) it has a common, antigenically invariant epitope that is immunoaccessible on viable bacteria in vitro and in vivo (16,(19)(20)(21); (b) the antigen (15, 16) and the gene (22) appear to be restricted to the pathogenic (and opportunistic) members of the genus; (c) the H.8 antigen gene contains a repetitive 15-bp sequence constituting > 90% of the structural gene (23), six copies of which are found in another virulence-associated gene, the azurin gene (24, 25); and (d) H.8 appears to be a lipoprotein, the first described in Neisseria species, and may be important in membrane architecture and integrity. Finally, the H.8 antigen is immunogenic in humans: H.8-specific antibody responses have been detected in patients with local and disseminated gonococcal and meningococcal disease (26,27).…”