Novantrone mitoxantrone, an antineoplastic agent with antiproliferative properties, is under investigation as an immunomodulating agent. The impact of mitoxantrone treatment on B lymphocyte reactivity is presented here. Administered i.p. in H2O at a dose of 0.5 mg/kg, daily for 14 days, mitoxantrone abrogated both the in vivo antibody response (to ovalbumin) and the in vitro plaque-forming cell (PFC) response (to SRC). In addition to the effects on thymus-dependent reactivity, PFC responses to the thymus-independent antigens TNP-LPS and TNP-Ficoll were also inhibited when tested in vivo or in vitro. B cells were identified as a target for the suppressive activity of mitoxantrone by using T cell-replacing factor to reconstitute the in vitro anti-SRC PFC response of a T lymphocyte-depleted spleen cell preparation. LPS-induced B cell mitogenesis was largely inhibited by mitoxantrone treatment. However, depletion of Sephadex G-10-adherent cells significantly restored the proliferative response. Flow cytometric analysis revealed a dramatic decrease in splenic B lymphocyte content. Therefore, mitoxantrone exerted a potent suppressive influence on the humoral immune system through a direct reduction in B cell number augmented by macrophage-mediated inhibition of B cell proliferation.