The proliferation of Mycobacterium-primed murine lymph node T cells to purified protein derivative of tuberculin (PPD), as measured by the uptake of tritiated thymidine, requires the obligatory participiation of macrophages which stimulate the T cells either directly with antigen in association with cell surface Ia (I region-defined antigens), or indirectly by means of soluble factors. We have examined the possibility that this functional dichotomy is due to heterogeneity within the macrophage population. Since the maturation of macrophages from the precursor monocytes is associated with cell enlargement, macrophage subpopulations differing in developmental stage are obtained by cell fractionation according to size by velocity sedimentation. Nylon-wool-purified T cells which have been depleted of macrophages and B cells are stimulated with PPD either in a free form or bound to macrophages which have been incubated for a short time (i.e., pulsed) with PPD. We found that for PPD-pulsed macrophages, only the smallest (and probably the most immature) are capable of inducing T-cell proliferation. This antigen presentation function is mediated by cell surface Ia since it is abolished by pretreatment of the macrophages with anti-Ia serum and complement. On the other hand, all macrophages, irrespective of sensitivity to anti-Ia serum, secrete factors which will stimulate T-cell proliferation in the presence of free PPD. Thus the maturation of macrophages is accompanied by a shift from Ia-dependent to Ia-independent mechanisms of immunostimulation. © 1979.