Lymph nodes cells and spleen cells in a 50:50 mixture from Fischer 344 rats were cultured on syngeneic glial cells and fibroblasts. In the glia cultures, but not in the fibroblast cultures, the lymphocytes were stimulated to a vivid blast transformation and mitotic activity with a peak after 7 days, after which they reverted to small- and medium-sized lymphocytes. The stimulated lymphoid cells were not cytotoxic to glial cells when tested in a microcytotoxicity assay. A fraction of the lymphoblasts and their progeny (approximately 4%) took a positive intracytoplasmic stain for γ-globulin immunoglobulin G after direct immunofluorescence. Efforts to demonstrate immunoglobulin produced and released into the culture medium by the stimulated cells were negative. The findings may indicate that among the lymphoid cells responding to the glial antigens under these conditions, there are suppressor cells that abrogate the killer cell effect.