The tolerance induced by orthotopic liver transplantation [DA (RT1a) rats to PVG (RT1c) rats] can be prevented by total body irradiation of the donor rat. Reconstitution of the irradiated donor with DA splenic leukocytes reintroduces this tolerance. To investigate the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) specificity of passenger leukocytes, irradiated DA donors were reconstituted by third-party BN (RT1n) splenic leukocytes. The reconstitution with BN splenocytes re-established DA-specific tolerance in PVG recipients, as confirmed by subsequent DA cardiac allografting, while BN hearts were rejected with second-set tempo. To determine which cell components play an important role in re-establishing liver graft tolerance, DA splenic leukocytes were further purified into three types: T, B, and adherent cells. Only "T-cell-enriched" preparations restored liver graft tolerance in three out of five PVG recipients. These results suggest that passenger leukocytes of differing MHC types can help to induce liver-specific tolerance and that T cells in the liver graft may be essential to regulate tolerance induction.