It has previously been demonstrated that Trypanosoma cruzi-derived antigens (TRP) and human parasite-specific antibodies (Id) stimulate proliferation of cells from Chagasic patients. More recently, we have shown that activated T cells and CD5+ B cells are present in elevated levels in the peripheral blood of Chagasic patients. Upon in vitro exposure to these two different types of stimulatory molecules (TRP, Id), we now show that each of these elevated populations respond differentially to TRP or Id. We found that stimulation with TRP led to preferential expansion of activated T cells, while Id preferentially stimulated CD5+ B cells and CD8+ T cells. Moreover, this expansion of CD5+ B cells by Id was even more pronounced in cultures of cells from Chagasic patients with the severe, cardiac form of the disease, as compared to indeterminate patients. CD8+ T cells comprise approximately 50% of the total T cells in cultures stimulated by Id while in TRP-stimulated cultures their frequency is proportionally lower. Since parasite antigens and antiparasite antibodies are always present in the host during the chronic phase of the disease, they may also be involved with differential activation mechanisms of these cell populations in vivo.