Peripheral lymphoid organs of the rat were investigated for the presence of lymphocytes that expressed the pan-T cell markers CD5 and OX-52 but not the T cell receptor (TcR) alpha/beta. Two such populations were identified: 2% to 4% of lymphocytes in adult spleen, lymph nodes and peripheral blood are CD5+ TcR alpha/beta- and express the OX-52 antigen at the same density as TcR alpha/beta+ T-cells. About 90% of these cells are CD8+. A second population is CD5-, CD8+ and OX-52low. Radioimmunoprecipitation from digitonin lysates of surface-labeled cells with an anti-CD3 antiserum showed that the CD5+, but not the CD5- population of TcR alpha/beta- cells expresses a CD3-associated disulfide-linked cell surface molecule of about 100 kDa apparent mol. mass. Upon reduction, one major band, migrating with 48 kDa was observed. A band of the same size was obtained with an anti-human delta chain peptide antiserum, indicating that the CD3-associated non-TcR alpha/beta molecule is the rat TcR gamma/delta. Functional assays showed that most, if not all natural killer (NK) cell activity is present in the CD5(-)-OX-52low population. Reactivity to foreign major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens in mixed lymphocyte reaction was exclusively found in TcR alpha/beta+ splenic T cells. It is concluded that rat gamma/delta T cells in the spleen do not contain a high frequency of cells with specificity for foreign MHC antigens. The seeding of the periphery with alpha/beta and the presumptive gamma/delta T cells was followed from birth. Most prominently in the spleen, alpha/beta T cells reached adult levels much later than gamma/delta T cells. Taken together, these findings demonstrate the expression of the TcR gamma/delta on a minor population of peripheral rat T cells with the predominant phenotype CD4-CD8+ that has no NK cell activity when freshly isolated and does not contain a high frequency of alloreactive cells.