All plasmids in bacteria are units which replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome, are generally less than 1/20 the size of the bacterial chromosome, and contain the information for self-replication. The 2.6-megadalton (MDa) cryptic gonococcal plasmids were first identified in the genus Neisseria in 1972 (13). Since cryptic plasmids had no measurable phenotype, they attracted little attention. The importance of plasmids in Neisseria spp. changed with the identification of 1-lactamase plasmids in N. gonorrhoeae in 1976 (12). These plasmids encoded a P-lactamase which rendered the strains resistant to penicillin, the drug of choice for the therapy of gonorrhea at that time. As a result, P-lactamase plasmids had a great influence on the antibiotic treatment of gonorrhea. Since then, the indigenous 24.5-MDa conjugative gonococcal plasmids have been described and were shown to code for their own conjugal transfer, as well as mobilize the small gonococcal P-lactamase plasmids to other N.