WILLIAMS. Growth of cellular forms in cultures of chromatin bodies isolated from Bacillus megaterium. J. Bacteriol. 85:623-627. 1963.-Chromatin bodies isolated from old cultures of Bacillus megaterium were capable of growing into protoplastlike cells when cultured in broth enriched with horse serum, yeast extract, adenosine triphosphate, and penicillin. A tendency toward formation of rod forms of bacteria was observed in such cultures. Omission of penicillin from the medium resulted in development of short bacterial forms. In 3 of 29 experiments, actual bacillary forms indistinguishable from the parent B. megaterium organism were recovered. Culture of the chromatin bodies in plain nutrient broth did not produce any growth. Inoculation on serum-enriched agar medium of a culture of chromatin bodies, after they had begun multiplication in serum-enriched broth, resulted in