We examined the humoral immune response in both HIV-1 infected and uninfected volunteers immunized with candidate HIV-1 recombinant envelope subunit vaccines (Genentech gp120IIIB, MicroGeneSys gp160IIIB, or ImmunoAG gp160IIIB). Immunization of both HIV-1 infected and uninfected volunteers with these immunogens resulted in the induction of Abs preferentially reactive with epitopes accessible on a denatured form of gp120. While sera from HIV-1 uninfected gp120/gp160IIIB vaccinees bound gp120/gp41, which was expressed on the surface of H9 cells infected with HIV-1IIIB, minimal binding to HIV-1MN or HIV-1RF infected cells was obtained. Induction of qualitatively similar immune responses by these immunogens would not have been predicted based on their different tertiary structures. These data indicate a restriction of the immune response to linear, conserved epitopes poorly accessible on both monomeric gp120 and cell-surface expressed oligomeric gp120/gp41 and a lack of Abs specific for conformational epitopes conserved across divergent HIV-1 strains. Poor recognition of HIV-1 envelope tertiary and quaternary structure may explain the restricted neutralization profiles of vaccinee sera against laboratory-adapted strains of HIV-1 and their inability to neutralize primary HIV-1 isolates. Alternate immunogens or reformulations with the capacity to elicit Abs that preferentially bind to natively folded gp120 should be investigated and correlated with their ability to neutralize more diverse laboratory-adapted and primary HIV-1 isolates.