A murine monoclonal antibody, mAb 8523, raised against whole human pro-monocytic U937 cells recognizes an 18 kDa antigen in human neutrophils (PMN), as determined by immunoprecipitation and by immunodetection on Western blots of SDS-PAGE of PMN membrane fractions. That is 18 kDa antigen corresponds to the phagocyte peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBZDR) is evidenced by its co-migration with the 18 kDa covalently labeled PBZDR, detected by autoradiography, and their co-modulation upon phorbol-myristate-acetate activation of PMN. Purified mAb 8523 (IgG2b) is able to dose-dependently and specifically stimulate both the basal and the FMLP-induced oxidative burst of intact human PMN, assessed by luminol-amplified chemiluminescence. This property of the first described monoclonal antibody against PBZDR supports the implication of this receptor in NADPH-oxidase activation and consequently in phagocyte-dependent host defense mechanisms.