Normal human CD8+ T cell clones were co-isolated from the same culture wells as CD4+ T effector cell clones specific for myelin basic protein (MBP). Microcultures from which the CD8+ clones were isolated initially proliferated weakly to whole MBP and to an MBP peptide spanning residues 90-170. This pattern of response was similar to strongly proliferating wells that yielded CD4+ T cell clones specific for the 90-170 peptide. After repeated stimulation, however, no response to MBP or MBP 90-170 was detected, even though the number of cells increased after stimulation. Phenotyping and TCR analyses revealed the presence of two CD8+, CD4-, IL-2R+ T cell isolates that expressed a single V beta gene (V beta 17) that differed from the CD4+ isolates that uniformly expressed V beta 14. One of these CD8+ clones (C9) inhibited the antigen-driven proliferation of an autologous MBP 90-170 reactive clone but not an autologous clone specific for Herpes simplex virus (HSV), without affecting MHC non-restricted mitogen responses of the same clones. Moreover, C9 did not inhibit heterologous CD4+ T cell clones specific for MBP 1-38 or 90-170. A culture supernatant of the CD8+ clone showed the same pattern but lower levels of inhibition. C9 had mild cytolytic activity when incubated at high ratios with an autologous MBP-specific CD4+ clone. Lysis was blocked completely by anti-MHC class I antibodies, but not by anti-MHC II antibodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)