Injection of the bacterial superantigen Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin B (SEB) into mice provokes a rapid expansion and subsequent contraction of the pool of SEB-reactive T cells bearing T cell receptor (TcR) V beta 8 gene products. Given that interleukin 2 (IL-2) stimulates proliferation, abolishes anergy, and counteracts apoptotic cell death in T cells in vitro, we tested whether the IL-2 synthesis inhibitor cyclosporin A (CsA) or a vaccinia virus recombinant releasing high amounts of human IL-2 modulate SEB responses in vivo. Surprisingly, neither IL-2 nor CsA were able to change the in vivo kinetics and magnitude of SEB-induced expansion, unresponsiveness to SEB, and peripheral clonal deletion of T cells expressing products of the SEB-reactive TcR V beta 8 gene family. In accord with these in vivo observations, IL-2 is incapable of reversing "anergy" and apoptotic cell death of V beta 8+ SEB-reactive T cells isolated from SEB-primed mice in vitro. Accordingly, upon SEB injection V beta 8+ T cells expand rapidly, without expressing IL-2 receptor (IL-2R)alpha chains in vivo, although SEB induces IL-2R alpha in vitro. Altogether, these results indicate that the IL-2/IL-2R-mediated pathway is not involved in T cell repertoire modulation by bacterial superantigens. Moreover, the data suggest that unresponsiveness of V beta 8+ T cells from SEB-primed mice is not a reversible process, but involves an unreversible commitment to programmed cell death. Absence or presence of IL-2 responsiveness could be a hallmark to distinguish truly reversible anergy and peripheral clonal deletion.