Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were elicited to the nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae variants d1 to d4, which differ in the outer membrane protein P2 to analyze the immunological properties of the variable parts of this protein. Five MAbs reacted in a whole-cell enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) only with the homologous strain and in some cases with its variants, but not with 69 unrelated nonencapsulated H. influenzae isolates; nine MAbs also reacted with some other H. influenzae isolates, and four MAbs showed broad cross-reactivity. All of the MAbs reacted with purified protein P2 in ELISAs and immunoblotting. The five MAbs which reacted with the homologous strain d3 and not with the variants d1, d2, and d4 promoted complement-dependent bactericidal activity against strain d3. These and four other MAbs reacted with the intact bacteria of strain d3 in immunogold electron microscopy, indicating that they were directed against surface-exposed epitopes of outer membrane protein P2. A mutant of strain d3 was isolated as a survivor from bacterial killing by complement and MAb 30DA5. This mutant had an altered P2 protein on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels and had lost its reactivity with all of the five H. influenzae d3-specific MAbs but not with the other MAbs. From these results, we conclude that the variable parts of outer membrane protein P2 of nonencapsulated H. influenzae from the sputum of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease are immunogenic and mostly surface exposed. Only strain-specific MAbs promoted complement-dependent killing of the bacteria, which was abolished in a spontaneous mutant with an altered P2 protein.