Female dwarf rats at different ages were treated with recombinant porcine GH or with a potent sheep anti-rat GH serum. Body weight and spleen weight increased with GH and decreased with anti-GH treatment (p < 0.001). Neither GH nor anti-GH treatment resulted in a change in circulating WBCs, but GH decreased, while anti-GH increased, RBC counts (p < 0.001). Similarly, GH treatment tended to decrease the ratio of CD4+:CD8+ T-cells while anti-GH increased (p < 0.05) the ratio. Anti-GH treatment also enhanced the animals' ability to produce specific IgG in response to KLH injection. These results indicate that GH may have a physiological role in suppressing humoral immune function but may enhance cell-mediated immunity.