In miniature swine, one-haplotype class I disparate renal allografts are accepted without exogenous immunosuppression by approximately 35% of recipients. Alternatively, transplants bearing a two-haplotype class I mismatch are always rejected acutely. However, long-term acceptance in the latter animals can be achieved uniformly with a 12-day course of cyclosporine. In vitro studies of recipient cell-mediated lymphocytotoxicity responses have shown donor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte clones in tolerant animals, suggesting that tolerance may be a local phenomenon or a central phenomenon activated in the milieu of the graft. Six animals were retransplanted with kidneys MHC-matched to their original allograft to determine whether (1) tolerance is a central phenomenon; (2) host tolerance can be broken with a fresh challenge of donor antigen and antigen-presenting cells; and (3) graft adaptation is required for maintenance of tolerance. Four of the retransplanted animals had been spontaneous acceptors of one-haplotype class I-disparate grafts and two had been rendered tolerant to two-haplotype class I-mismatched kidneys with CsA induction. All six explanted allografts showed no histological evidence of rejection and all six retransplants were accepted without exogenous immunosuppression. These findings suggest that in miniature swine tolerance of class I-disparate kidneys is a stable, centrally mediated phenomenon that cannot be broken with a challenge of fresh donor antigen and donor-type APCs. Furthermore, successful retransplantation without immunosuppression in animals receiving CsA induction therapy for their first transplant suggests that graft adaptation is not necessary for the maintenance of tolerance.