The nature of accessory cells in rat lymph nodes which can present antigen to primed T cells was investigated. Removal of adherent, phagocytic cells from antigen-primed lymph node cells by passage over glass-bead and nylon wool columns followed by treatment with carbonyl iron did not abrogate the antigen-specific proliferative response to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) or to the synthetic polypeptide L-glutamic acid-L-alanine-L-tyrosine (GAT). This T cell-enriched population was free of contaminating macrophages as determined by latex bead ingestion and morphological criteria during a 4-day culture period. Treatment of the T cell preparation with rabbit anti-rat IgG and complement or rosetting with IgG-coated sheep erythrocytes to remove any remaining B cells or macrophages did not significantly affect the proliferative response to antigen. Analysis of the T cell preparation by panning techniques with monoclonal antibodies to T cell surface markers suggested that both the responding T cell and the antigen-presenting cell were positive for the rat T cell marker, W3/13. The KLH-primed LN T cell-enriched fraction contained two distinct cell populations that were separable on the basis of their reactivity to OX-6 antibody. Two populations, an OX-6+ and an OX-6-, interacted synergistically in a KLH-dependent in vitro proliferative response. The cells within the T cell-enriched fraction that were positive for the OX-6 marker functioned primarily as the APCs, while the OX-6- cell fraction contained cells that proliferated to antigen when OX-6+ cells from either the T cell fraction or the adherent fraction were present. The implications of these findings are discussed.