Study of CD4+ T-cell response and T-cell receptor (TCR) specificity is crucial for understanding etiology of immune-mediated diseases and developing targeted therapies. However, solubility, accessibility, and stability of synthetic antigenic peptides used in T-cell assays may be a critical point in such studies. Here we present a T-cell activation reporter system using recombinant proteins containing antigenic epitopes fused with bacterial thioredoxin (trx-peptides) and obtained by bacterial expression. We report that co-incubation of CD4+ HA1.7 TCR+ reporter Jurkat 76 TRP-cells with CD80+ HLA-DRB1*01:01+ HeLa-cells or CD4+ Ob.1A12 TCR+ Jurkat 76 TRP with CD80+ HLA-DRB1*15:01+ HeLa-cells resulted in activation of reporter Jurkat 76 TPR after addition of recombinant trx-peptide fusion proteins, containing TCR-specific epitopes. Trx-peptides were comparable with corresponding synthetic peptides in their capacity to activate Jurkat 76 TPR. These data demonstrate that thioredoxin as a carrier protein (trx) for antigenic peptides exhibits minimal interference with recognition of MHC-specific peptides by TCRs and consequent T-cell activation. Our findings highlight potential feasibility of trx-peptides as a reagent for assessing the immunogenicity of antigenic fragments.