Materials with LT activity present in supernatants from PHA stimulated human lymphocytes in vitro are very heterogeneous and can be separated into multiple molecular weight classes, termed complex, α, β, and γ. Several of these classes can be further resolved into subclasses by other physical and chemical methods. The immunologic relationships of these materials one to another were examined employing various rabbit anti-humn LT sera which will neutralize LT activity on L-929 cells in vitro. These studies reveal: (a) LT activities are due to a distinct group of substances which are immunologically related one to another and can exist in several molecular weight forms; (b) a high MW class of molecules, termed complex, appears to contain all currently known LT classes and subclasses; (c) LT classes and subclasses both have common (public) and discrete (private) antigenic specificities; (d) human LT classes and subclasses do not appear to share Ag determinants with materials with LT activity released by lectin stimulated lymphoid cells from rabbit, rat, hamster, guinea pig, or mouse; and (e) human LT molecules are not immunologically related to cell toxins released by glass adherent human peripheral blood monocytes or PMN cells. These data indicate human LT molecules form a "discrete system" of lymphocyte derived cell toxins, which can associate together into various related but different MW forms in the supernatant. © 1978.