Although potentially autoreactive T cells are present even in healthy subjects, most individuals do not develop autoimmune disease. It has been well demonstrated that CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells play a significant role in controlling the expansion of autoreactive T cells in the periphery. However, some healthy individuals exhibit measurable responses to self peptide even in the presence of CD4+ CD25+ regulatory cells. This article describes the regulation of human CD4+ T cell responses to glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), an autoantigen implicated in type-1 diabetes, by autologous CD8+ suppressor T cells. In cells cultured from healthy individuals, the inclusion of autologous CD8+ T cells at physiological levels resulted in a dramatic decrease in the magnitude of in vitro CD4+ T cell responses to GAD65 peptide. Based on transwell experiments, the observed suppression was cell contact-dependent. However, antibody blocking studies indicated that suppression was mediated by IL-10. Cell fractionation studies suggested that CD8+ suppressor T cells originate from the CD45RA+ CD27- population. The suppression of CD4+ T cell responses to GAD65 in healthy individuals raises the possibility that CD8+ suppressor T cells play an important role in controlling potentially autoreactive T cells in the general population.