Progression of HIV-induced immunodeficiency is associated with both B cell activation and an increased proportion of Vdelta1+ T cells in PBL. To examine whether the peripheral expansion of Vdelta1+ cells is driven by activated B cells, we isolated CD19+ PBL from HIV+ individuals at different stages of infection and used them to stimulate Vdelta1+ T cell clones. The Vdelta1+ T cell clones were isolated from HIV+ individuals and selected on the basis of cytotoxic activity and IFN-gamma expression in response to lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) established from patients with AIDS (AIDS-related LCLs) but not LCLs of HIV- donors. Peripheral blood B cells from HIV+ patients induced IFN-gamma expression in these Vdelta1+ clones, and their stimulatory ability was associated with up-regulated expression of the CD38 activation Ag and with a 6- to 10-fold increased spontaneous Ig production. Stimulation of CD19+ PBL from HIV+ individuals with cross-linked anti-CD40 mAb or rgpl20 further augmented induction of IFN-gamma expression in the Vdelta1+ cells. The isolated Vdelta1+ T cell clones expressed the Jdelta1 gene segment, but differed in Vgamma gene segment usage and in the junctional region of TCR-delta chains, indicating Vdelta gene-determined recognition. These results provide evidence that the peripheral expansion of Vdelta1+ cells in HIV infection is associated with phenotypic and functional alterations of B cells, due to chronic activation during progression to AIDS.