We describe a subset of CD4+/CD3+ human T lymphocytes that demonstrated a remarkably limited TCR repertoire responding to alloantigen stimulation. These cells have been characterized previously by their granular morphology and expression of CD11b but not CD28. Whereas multiple CD28+/CD4+ alloproliferative cloned cell lines generated by culture at limiting dilution immediately after isolation from peripheral blood each had a unique TCR-beta gene rearrangement, 19 of 21 CD11b+/CD4+ clones showed identical TCR-beta, and gamma gene rearrangements. In conventional MLR, the CD11b+/CD4+ cells responded poorly after stimulation with some HLA-class II Ag, and staining with a TCR Id-specific antibody and DNA blot hybridization suggested that the responding CD11b+/CD4+ cells typically contained predominant clonal populations. Clones of CD11b+/CD4+ cells with different TCR gene rearrangements showed closely similar patterns of responses when stimulated by a panel of allogeneic PBMC, but the response pattern did not correspond to that of any known HLA-class II Ag. These findings indicate that CD11b+/CD4+ cells have a limited alloproliferative repertoire characterized by predominant recognition of a limited number of undefined determinants that appear to be expressed in association with multiple distinct HLA-class II Ag. Our results suggest that CD11b+/CD4+ cells are selected for clonal reactivity by processes distinct from those for CD28+/CD4+ cells.