To examine the repertoire of Pneumocystis carinii antigens recognized by antibody-secreting B cells from tracheobronchial lymph nodes isolated immediately following recovery from P. carinii pneumonia, monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were produced from these cells. In contrast to previous studies of systemic immunity, P. carinii gpA was not the immunodominant antigen recognized by these B cells. Forty-nine (91%) of 54 P. carinii-specific hybridoma culture supernatants reacted with P. carinii antigens other than gpA. Many of the resulting MAbs recognized a previously uncharacterized antigen expressed on the surface of both cysts and trophozoites. Western blotting using one of the cloned MAbs revealed reactivity with a broad range of antigenic material, with the most intense reactivity in the 50- to 65-kDa region of the blot. The antigens identified by these MAbs merit further investigation regarding protective immunity to P. carinii because they were recognized by B cells in the context of recovery from P. carinii pneumonia.