Recent reports have challenged the belief that accessory cells are resistant to cyclosporine. Such a tenet was based on the observation that several functions of accessory cells, such as IL-1 production and phagocytosis, are resistant to the drug. On the other hand, when a less primitive, more refined function of accessory cells was examined--i.e., the capacity to take up, process, and present antigen in an MHC-restricted fashion to antigen-specific T lymphocytes, CsA proved to be an effective inhibitor. In contrast to this finding, when antigen was provided in the form of an immune complex prepared with a monoclonal antibody, uptake of antigen--likely mediated by the Fc receptors--and subsequent processing and presentation were not affected by CsA. These results suggest that, depending on whether the antigen is taken up by constitutive or by receptor-mediated endocytosis, accessory cells can be functionally defined as resistant or sensitive to CsA.