The aim of this study was to investigate the use of a nucleolar antigen to discriminate between proliferating and resting cells. Antinucleolar antibodies (Si87) were obtained from a scleroderma patient. The specificity of immunostaining was verified and morphological changes in nucleoli were monitored using a fluorescence microscope. Fluorescence of propidium iodide-stained DNA and nucleolar immunofluorescence were measured by flow cytometry. Following phytohaemagglutinin stimulation the number of nucleoli of normal human peripheral blood lymphocytes increased about 3-fold, accompanied by enlargement of nucleolar size. Simultaneously a mean increase in total immunofluorescence per cell by a factor of three was detected. The method developed and applied here allows a discrimination between resting and proliferating human lymphocytes on the basis of their nucleolar antigen content.