This study was conducted to analyze the extent to which the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) a genotype of the thymus restricts the cooperating phenotype of helper T cells with respect to their ultimate ability to interact effectively with partner B lymphocytes in the development of antibody responses. These studies, like others reported previously (I, 2), made use of artificially constructed bone marrow chimeras prepared by reconstituting aduh-thymectomized, lethally irradiated F1 mice with syngeneic F1 bone marrow, together with transplanted thymuses from either F1 or parental donors. Reconstituted mice of these types were then immunized with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and their KLH-specific helper T cells so induced were tested for the cooperative helper activity they could provide to 2,4-dinitrophenyl (DNP)-primed B lymphocytes derived from conventional F1 or parental donors in developing secondary anti-DNP antibody responses to DNP-KLH. The results clearly show that the thymus influences little, and certainly does not restrict, the partner cell preference displayed by helper T cells differentiating in such environments. Moreover, the extent of thymic influence differed depending on the class of antibody being produced with the help of such cells.This investigation is an extension of earlier studies in this (3) and other laboratories (4-10) which have addressed the predictions of the concept of adaptive differentiation (3,(11)(12)(13)(14). This notion ascribes the partner cell preferences of various cells of the lymphoid system, known to be genetically controlled by various regions of the MHC (15), to processes of selection that occur early during cell differentiation and which are determined by the MHC phenotype of the environment in which such differentiation occurs (3,(11)(12)(13)(14). The first experiments supporting this concept were performed * Publication 94 from the Department of Cellular and Developmental Immunology and publication