A mycoplasma strain designated ISM1499 was used to develop a mycoplasma genetic system (G. G. Mahairas and F. C. Minion, J. Bacteriol. 171:1775-1780,1989; G. G. Mahairas, C. Jian, and F. C. Minion, Gene 93:61-65, 1990), but phenotypic inconsistencies led to the conclusion that this organism had been classified incorrectly as a member of the species Mycoplasma pulmonis. Studies were initiated to determine the proper taxonomic position of ISM1499, and on the basis of the results of our genetic analysis, this strain was assigned to the AchoZephsma oculi strain cluster. The base composition of strain ISM1499 was identical to the base composition of A. oculi 19L, but not to the base composition of AchoZephsma hidhwii PG8 (28.3 and 30.7 mol% G+C, respectively). The taxonomic position of ISM1499 was examined by performing a parsimony analysis with 16s ribosomal DNA sequence data, and the results were compared with previous phylogenetic reconstructions. Our results indicated that ISM1499 is more closely related phylogenetically to A. oculi 19L than to A. hidlawii PG8 and JAl. Heterogeneity in the 16s ribosomal DNA sequences of A. oculi 19L and ISM1499 and in the 16s ribosomal DNA sequences of A. hidhwii PG8 and JAl may indicate that unusual dissimilarities occur in the 16s ribosomal DNA sequences of members of the genus AchoZephsma.Mycoplasma strain ISM1499 was originally isolated from a Mycoplasma pulmonis culture as a high-frequency transforming isolate. This organism was used to study mycoplasma transformation and to establish a mycoplasmal cloning system (9-12). On the basis of the results of these studies and Western blot (immunoblot) analyses performed with antisera raised in rabbits against a M. pulmonis stock strain by Minion and coworkers, strain ISM1499 was assumed to be a M. pulmonis strain, possibly a membrane or restriction mutant with a mutation which conveyed upon it the high-frequency transforming phenotype.Dybvig and coworkers first noticed differences between ISM1499 and other M. pulmonis strains when they examined recA homology and phage typing data (4, 5). A serological examination by J. G. Tully (Mycoplasmology Section, Laboratory of Medical Microbiology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases confirmed that ISM1499 is an Acholeplasma strain rather than an M. pulmonis strain; this resulted in author's corrections being placed in both the Journal of Bacteriology and Plasmid (11, 12). The serological typing results indicated that ISM1499 is antigenically related to Acholeplasma oculi and Acholeplasma laidlawii; the strongest reactivity was obtained with an anti-A. oculi 19L antiserum.The class Mollicutes comprises a unique group of eubacteria that lack cell walls (17). In a newly proposed classification scheme Tully et al. (24) divided these organisms into eight genera on the basis of the phylogenetic data of Weisburg et al. (26) and various other characteristics, including a sterol growth requirement (the genera Mycoplasma, Ureaplasma, Entomoplasma, Spiroplasma, and Anaeroplasma), a ...