Citrullinated vimentin (cVIM) is one of the antigens specifically targeted by anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. The association between ACPA and certain HLA-DRB1 alleles, those coding for the shared epitope (SE), suggests that this response could be T-cell mediated. HLA-DR9 alleles, which do not code for the SE, have recently been associated with ACPA (+) RA. The objective of this work was to study CD4+ T cell responses to cVIM in RA patients and healthy controls carrying HLA-DR9 alleles. Fourteen RA patients and ten healthy controls previously genotyped for HLA-DRB1 were studied for the presence of serum anti-cVIM antibodies by Western blot and ELISA. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated with native vimentin and cVIM, and CD4+ T cells proliferation was assessed by flow cytometry. Citrulline-specific CD4+ T cells proliferation was found not only in RA patients but also in healthy controls. Although most patients carrying HLA-DR9 alleles present anti-cVIM antibodies, HLA-DR9 alleles were associated with weaker cVIM-driven CD4+ T-cell responses among RA patients. These results suggest that HLA-DR9 alleles could exert a protective effect on the recognition of cVIM epitopes by CD4+ T cells. In this context, other citrullinated proteins may break T and B cell tolerance, with cVIM only acting as a cross-reactive target for ACPA.