“…Several explanations may be advanced for these inconclusive results. First, it could be due to the production, by these S. aureus variants, of a cell wall polysaccharide known as the Compact Colony Forming Active Substance (CCFAS, Yoshida, Ohtomo & Minegishi, 1975), which can cause a clotting reaction with fibrinogen (Yoshida, Ohtomo & Minegishi, 1977, 1980 and which has been extracted from at least one S. epidermidis strain (Yoshida, Ohtomo & Usui, 1978), resulting in conversion irrespective of which of clumping factor or free coagulase they lacked. Other reasons could be that plasma components reacted through the capsular substance of the Smith diffuse strain, that the fibrinogen (and indeed the other plasma components and serum) solutions used might not have been 1000% pure or that a time-dependent mechanism which is unrelated to a coagulase or clumping factor-fibrinogen interaction was also involved.…”