“…Treatment of the supernatant fluids of such cultures with ammonium sulphate yielded a precipitate which, after purification on diethylaminoethyl cellulose and Sephadex G-IOO was found to contain two main fractions, one indistinguishable from endotoxin and the other a lower molecular weight non-toxic material which lacked most of the biological properties of endotoxin. This latter fraction we have tentatively identified (Marsh & Crutchley, 1967) as native hapten, or as it is now called, native protoplasmic polysaccharide (Rudbach et al I 967). The present paper describes the biological properties and serological relationships of these two fractions : free endotoxin and the non-toxic material from culture supernatants of Escherichia coli 078 K 80.…”