Parasite antigenic fractions obtained by biochemical purification of sheep hydatid fluid were subjected to enzymatic digestion. The relative mobilities of the 5 and B antigens, before and after treatment, were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blot. Antigenic fractions transferred to nitrocellulose were also treated with sodium metaperiodate and concanavalin A. The results indicate that antigen 5 contains a substantial amount of carbohydrates covalently linked to a polypeptide backbone, which strongly bind to concanavalin A and is removed by N-glycosidase F (PNGase F). Antigen 5 possesses complex N-linked oligosaccharides (PNGase F sensitive), without terminal N-acetyl- d-glucosamine residues ( N-acetyl- d-glucosaminidase nonsensitive) and has no high-mannose oligosaccharides (endo-β- N-acetylglucosaminidase H nonsensitive). In contrast, the antigen B of low molecular weight is not susceptible to either enzymatic digestions (PNGase F, Endo H, and N-acetyl- d-glucosaminidase) or sodium metaperiodate oxidation and it does not bind to concanavalin A. Polyclonal antibodies prepared against the two antigens reacted with the deglycosylated antigen 5 in Western blot. The dominant epitopes are, therefore, polypeptides, although the presence of carbohydrate epitopes in the native glycoproteins cannot be excluded.