Intratumoral growth of Staphylococcus aureus was compared with the intrarenal growth, to examine the usefulness of the method as a marker of its pathogenicity. When 5 x 10(7) CFU/mouse of three derivatives from S. aureus Cowan I with different intrarenal growth were intravenously injected into Ehrlich tumor-bearing mice, they lodged in the tumor tissue at approximately 10(3) CFU/0.1 g by 30 min after infection, and grew in the range of 10(6) CFU/0.1 g to 10(8) CFU/0.1 g by day 4, regardless of their intrarenal growth capacity. In contrast, S. saprophyticus lodged in both tissues to the same degree as S. aureus, but did not grow at all. The time course of the staphylococcal growth was different between tumor tissue and kidney, suggesting differences in the local responses against S. aureus.