To examine whether the Schwann cells in patients with autoimmune neuropathies have the potential to behave as professional antigen-presenting cells, we investigated the expression of the co-stimulatory molecules BB-1, B7-1 (CD80) B7-2 (CD86) and their counter-receptors CD28 or CTLA-4 (CD152) at the protein and mRNA levels in sural nerve biopsies of patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), CIDP associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection (HIV-CIDP), IgM paraproteinaemic neuropathy and normal or non-immune axonal neuropathy, In single-and double-labelling experiments, we used the S-100 antigen as a pan-Schwann cell marker, myelin-associated glycoprotein as a marker for myelinating Schwann cells and the fibrillary acidic protein as a marker for unmyelinating Schwann cells, The expression of the B7 family of molecules was limited to BB-1 and was observed only on the Schwann cells, There was constitutive expression of BB-1 on unmyelinating Schwann cells in all nerves studied, However, in CIDP and HIV-CIDP, but not the other diseases, there was prominent upregulation of BB-1 on the myelinating Schwann cells, The endoneurial T cells in the proximity of BB-1-positive Schwann cells expressed the CD28 or CTLA-4 counterreceptors, Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction confirmed that these ligands were upregulated only in CIDP, Because the myelinating BB-1-positive Schwann cells expressed HLA-DR antigen, the findings indicate that, in CIDP, Schwann cells possess the necessary markers to function as antigen-presenting cells.