The production of monoclonal autoantibodies derived from individuals with autoimmune diseases constitutes a powerful tool to analyse an autoimmune process at both the antigen and antibody levels. We established a human anti-epithelial cell surface monoclonal antibody by applying hybridoma technology using peripheral blood lymphocytes from a patient with pemphigus vulgaris using a heteromyeloma as the fusion partner. The F12 monoclonal antibody displays four major characteristics: (1) it belongs to the IgM, kappa class; (2) it binds to the cell surface of stratified squamous and simple epithelia; (3) it recognizes an antigenic determinant associated with the desmosomal complex as demonstrated by indirect immunoelectron microscopy; (4) by immunoblotting analysis, it reacts with a 185 kDa polypeptide which was also recognized by a few pemphigus vulgaris sera. Although the F12 monoclonal antibody does not have the immunochemical properties of classical pemphigus vulgaris autoantibodies, several arguments suggest its relevance to the pemphigus vulgaris autoimmune response and, therefore, the heterogeneity of the antigen/antibody systems involved in this autoimmune disorder.