Mouse immune Interferon, induced by the T-cell mitogen staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA), was partially purified and used to immunize rabbits. The resulting antiserum neutralized all immune interferon preparations tested, including interferon induced in vitro by SEA, concanavalin A, phytohemagglutinin P, and pokeweed mitogen, and in mixed lymphocyte cultures. Interferon produced in vivo with specific antigen was also neutralized. The antiserum was equally potent against all these interferon preparations. The serum did not neutralize any virus-type interferon preparation tested, but immune interferon induced by SEA in athymic nude mouse spleen cells was neutralized. The neutralizing activity was precipitable by 33% ammonium sulfate, and was not removed by absorption of the serum with mouse cells. The data suggest that immune interferons produced under diverse conditions are antigenically the same or closely related.