Variable subregions within the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) coat displayed by African trypanosomes are predicted sites for T-and B-cell recognition. Hypervariable subregion 1 (HV-1) is localized to an internal amphipathic alpha helix in VSG monomers and may have evolved due to selective pressure by host T-cell responses to epitopes within this subregion. The prediction of T-cell receptor-reactive sites and major histocompatibility complex class II binding motifs within the HV-1 subregion, coupled with the conservation of amino acid residues in other regions of the molecule sufficient to maintain secondary and tertiary VSG structure, prompted us to test the hypothesis that Th cells may preferentially recognize HV-1 subregion peptides. Thus, we examined the fine specificity of VSG-specific T-cell lines, T-cell hybridomas, and Th cells activated during infection. Our results demonstrate that T-cell epitopes are distributed throughout the N-terminal domain of VSG but are not clustered exclusively within HV-1 or other hypervariable subregions. In contrast, T-cell-reactive sites were not detected within the relatively conserved C-terminal domain of VSG. Overall, this study is the first to dissect the fine specificity of T-cell responses to the trypanosome VSG and suggests that evolution of a conserved HV-1 region may be unrelated to selective pressures exerted by host T-cell responses. This study also demonstrates that T cells do not recognize the relatively invariant C-terminal region of the VSG molecule during infection, suggesting that it could serve as a potential subunit vaccine to provide variant cross-specific immunity for African trypanosomiasis.The plasma membrane of African trypanosomes is covered by a dense surface coat comprised of variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) homodimers (4,(8)(9)(10)45). VSG molecules are immunodominant antigens that elicit B-and T-cell responses capable of providing temporal protection for the host during infection (15,20,26,40). B-cell responses directed at surfaceexposed determinants of VSG eliminate parasites from the bloodstream, whereas polarized VSG-specific Th1-cell responses contribute to the production of gamma interferon (IFN-␥), a critical component of relative host resistance that controls the parasite burden within extravascular tissues (17,20,31). However, trypanosomes repeatedly evade complete immune elimination by switching their VSG coats through a process of antigenic variation. Replacement of VSG coats with antigenically distinct surface coats permits trypanosomes to escape from existing B-and T-cell responses and requires the host to make new temporally protective responses throughout infection.VSGs are separated into different families based on N-terminal and C-terminal proteolytic domains, sequence homologies, and the number and distribution of cysteine residues (5). Alignment of different Trypanosoma brucei VSGs within class and type subgroups has demonstrated that the primary amino acid sequences of VSG N-terminal domains are extremely diverse. However...