Many Leishmania antigens have been identified as members of conserved protein families, such as the acidic ribosomal proteins, the histones and the heat-shock proteins; despite this, they elicit specific immune responses. Furthermore, homologues of many of these antigens are immune targets in other infectious diseases and systemic autoimmune diseases. Here, Jose Maria Requena, Carlos Alonso and Manuel Soto review this class of widely distributed antigens, which they call 'panantigens'. They also propose a model to explain the prominent immunogenicity of these antigens during Leishmania infection, on the basis of the fact that many panantigens are constituents of multicomponent complexes in Me cell. The elucidation of the pathways by which Leishmania antigens are processed and presented to effector cells from the host immune system will sized light on Me immunopathology of leishmaniasis and help in the development of protective immunotherapies.