The immediate early protein (IE180) of pseudorabies virus (PrV) was generated by cycloheximide (CHX) reversal procedures in PrV-infected swine skin cells. Using this IE180 preparation as antigen, specific proliferation was detected in mononuclear cells (PBMNCs) from swine vaccinated with a modified live virus (MLV) PrV vaccine. Two sets of data support this conclusion, (a) PBMNCs of (c/c)SLA inbred swine vaccinated with an MLV vaccine a year before the test exhibited significant responses against structural virion proteins and IE180. (b) Vaccination of PrV-negative swine with the same MLV vaccine induced a conversion from an unresponsive state against IE180 to one of specific antigen-driven responsiveness. The responses of vaccinated swine against IE180 were significantly higher than their preimmune responses (p less than or equal to 0.003) or to the response of control swine (p less than or equal to 0.045). Moreover, IE180 antigens obtained from lysates of CHX-reversed, PrV-infected cells by heparin/agarose affinity separation also stimulated specific proliferation of PBMNCs from MLV-vaccinated swine, as their proliferative responses were significantly higher than those of unvaccinated swine (p less than or equal to 0.05). These data suggest that PrV IE180 contributes at least in part to the overall cellular response to PrV.