Monocytes differentiate from myeloid precursors towards the macrophage state of differentiation under the influence of 1,25-dihydroxy vitamins D3 (1,25 [OH]2 vitamin D3) and other factors and this is further propagated by colony stimulating factors (MCSF and GMCSF). Macrophage activation and phagocytosis of foreign particles are regularly accompanied by a so called "respiratory burst", an increase in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), exerted by the enzyme complex NADPH oxidase. A number of antioxidant enzymes is expressed at the same time to protect the cells from the cytotoxic effects of ROS directed against engulfed microorganisms. The selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidases and thioredoxin reductases are important examples. The cytosolic GPx isoenzyme (cGPx) and thioredoxin reductase alpha (TrxR alpha) are upregulated during the process of differentiation and under the influence of 1.25 (OH)2 vitamin D3. GPx isoenzymes neutralize H2O2. TrxR reduce sulfhydryl-groups like in cysteins either directly or via their cofactor thioredoxin and thus are involved in protein folding and critical protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions, e.g. modulation of dimerization and/or DNA-binding and ligand binding of transcription factors (glucocorticoid receptor and other steroid receptors, NF kappa B). In addition, the antibiotic peptide NK-lysin was shown to be a substrate for TrxR alpha, suggesting that TrxR protects the cell itself from the cytotoxic effects of NK-lysin. Selenium is incorporated into selenocysteine (Secys) in a regulated fashion in the presence of a hairpin structure (Secis element) in the 3'UTR of selenoprotein genes. Secis elements direct the insertion of Secys at UGA codons, which function as opal stop codons in the absence of a suitable Secis element and in selenium deficiency. The above mentioned processes might therefore be altered in relative selenium deficiency or vice versa be upregulated through selenium supplementation. We have shown that TrxR alpha is a 1.25 (OH)2 vitamin D3-responsive early gene in monocytic cells and that TrxR activity as well as GPx activity in these cells can be upregulated by the addition of selenium in vitro and ex vivo. Recent work demonstrates that thioredoxin rapidly enters the cell nucleus upon treatment of cells with H2O2, but little is known about the compartimentalization of the respiratory burst and the intracellular localization of antioxidant enzymes during that process. Macrophage function is insufficient if the generation of a respiratory burst is altered like in hereditary chronic granulomatous disease on one hand, but on the other hand is as well disturbed, if there is a lack in antioxidant enzyme activity. Thioredoxin has been identified as a lymphocyte growth factor and might therefore be involved in the crosstalk between macrophages and lymphocytes. The relevance of the above mentioned and other yet undefined monocytic selenoproteins remains to be elucidated in detail as well as the relevance of selenium supplementation in nutrition in general and in situations of critical infectious disease and autoimmunity.