Species of the genus Mycobacterium are aerobic, non-spore-forming, alcohol- and acid-fast, Gram-positive, slender, immotile rods with a worldwide distribution. The genus Mycobacterium includes approximately 170 species. Common characteristic of these bacteria is the so-called acid fastness in the Ziehl-Neelsen stain. M. tuberculosis is the most important mycobacterium worldwide as a causative agent of tuberculosis. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex includes various pathogens of skin infections such as M. tuberculosis, M. africanum, M. bovis and others.
Leprosy is an independent infectious complex which is very rare in Germany.
All other septa of the genus Mycobacterium are called "non-tuberculous mycobacteria" (NTM) or "mycobacteria other than tuberculosis" (MOTT). NTMs occur in the environment (soil, water). Isolation of "non-tuberculous mycobacteria" from patient material cannot necessarily be assumed to be a real "disease".