Cytotoxic and hemolytic activity of Haemophilus (Actinobacillus) pleuropneumoniae serotype 1 strain CM5 was investigated because of the potential role as a virulence determinant. Viable bacteria were toxic for porcine and bovine neutrophils, whereas bacteria killed by heat treatment at 60 C for 1 hour were not. Similarly, bacteria-free culture supernatant was cytotoxic and hemolytic in assays that used porcine neutrophils and erythrocytes, whereas supernatant treated at 60 C for 1 hour had no activity. Erythrocytes from various species were susceptible to the hemolytic activity of bacteria-free culture supernatant, with ovine and bovine erythrocytes being most sensitive. The neutrophil-toxic and hemolytic activity of bacteria-free culture supernatant was inhibited by cholesterol and oxygen and abolished after trypsin digestion. The neutrophil-toxic and hemolytic activity was preserved during storage at or less than 4 C, but was lost rapidly at 56 C or 80 C. Neutralizing antibodies were demonstrated in serum of pigs and rabbits immunized with 10-fold concentrated culture supernatant of strain CM5 and in field pigs that had recovered from natural infection with H pleuropneumoniae serotype 1. Bacteria-free culture supernatants of 18 strains, including H pleuropneumoniae serotypes 1 through 10, Actinobacillus suis, and Haemophilus taxon minor group, were tested for heat-sensitive, neutrophil-toxic, and hemolytic activity. Fifteen strains were neutrophil toxic, but only 10 of these were hemolytic. Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae, serotype 1, strain VLS557; serotype 5, strain K17; and Haemophilus taxon minor group strain 33PN were neither cytotoxic nor hemolytic.