BALB/c mice were hyperimmunized with non-infectious extracts of either Leishmania braziliensis promastigotes or Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes. When spleen cells from these mice were fused with P3X63Ag8 plasmacytoma cells, the resultant hybridomas synthesized monoclonal antibodies which displayed specific reactivity by indirect immunofluorescence with distinct subcellular components of the parasites. These studies revealed that antigens associated with the flagellum and with a nongranular component of the cytoplasm would account for much of the serologic cross-reactivity observed between the two species. Conversely, antigens associated with surface and/or cytoplasmic granules and with an intracellular organelle believed to be the kinetoplast appeared to be species-specific.