The adjuvant activity of a single highly purified saponin from the soap bark tree Quillaja saponaria was evaluated by using it as a component in an experimental vaccine containing rHIV-1 envelope protein (HIV-1 160D) adsorbed to alum. BALB/c mice immunized with experimental vaccine formulations containing the saponin adjuvant QS-21 produced significantly higher titers of antibodies than mice vaccinated with only the alum-adsorbed HIV-1 160D. Potent amnestic antibody responses to HIV-1 viral proteins were also induced. Ag-specific proliferative responses to recombinant proteins and to three variants of HIV-1 were significantly increased using QS-21 as an adjuvant. Alum-adsorbed HIV-1 160D failed to induce measurable proliferative responses to inactivated HIV-1 viruses, but group-specific proliferative responses were raised when the QS-21 adjuvant was used in the vaccine formulation. MHC class I restricted CTL specific for the immunodominant V-3 loop were induced but only when the QS-21 adjuvant was included in the vaccine formulation. The production of serine esterase by Ag-activated splenic mononuclear cells, indicating the maturation of precursor CTL, was used as a secondary measure of CTL activity, and this response was also increased. The specificity of antibody responses was not significantly broadened using QS-21; the adjuvant increased the immune recognition of epitopes throughout the HIV-1 glycoprotein 160. However, the specificity of the proliferation and serine esterase responses was broadened, suggesting that the QS-21 augmented cell-mediated immune responses specific for epitopes outside of the V-3 loop. Additionally, the QS-21 adjuvant appeared to induce recognition of weakly immunogenic epitopes that were not recognized using only alum-adsorbed HIV-1 160D. The ability of QS-21 to augment both antibody and cell-mediated immune responses suggests that this adjuvant could be a valuable component in subunit vaccines.