T lymphocytes were propagated in vitro from endomyocardial biopsy specimens that were obtained weekly from four patients during the first 2 to 3 months after heart transplantation. The culture was performed in the presence of recombinant interleukin-2 and interleukin-4, with or without mitogen, in which especially CD8+ donor-specific cytotoxic T cells expanded. These cells, presumably reflecting an in vivo activated population, could even be cultured from biopsy specimens without histopathologic signs of rejection. A preferential expression of T cell receptor V beta gene families was found in these T-cell lines. This finding is in contrast with the heterogenous expression in peripheral blood T cells of the same patient. The restriction in V beta gene family expression was substantiated in the evaluation of clones obtained from two cell lines. Among 17 donor-specific cytotoxic T-cell clones derived from one cell line, only four V beta gene families were expressed. All five clones from the other cell line used the V beta 8 family. Some clones expressing a distinct V beta gene family used the same V-D-J junction sequence, indicative of their origin from the same precursor. With the use of oligonucleotide probes complementary to clone-specific V-D-J junction sequences, four of five clones were detected not only in the parent T-cell line but also in T-cell lines derived from biopsy specimens with rejection reactions taken 1 week earlier and 2 weeks later and in blood cells taken before and 0.5, 3, and 6 months after transplantation; these clones were not detected in blood cells harvested 12 months after transplantation. This study showed a restricted usage of the V beta gene families by activated donor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in the heart transplant.