We identified the immediate-early transactivator Zta of Epstein-Barr virus as a target for specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Cells pulsed with overlapping synthetic peptides representing the entire amino acid sequence of Zta proved to be efficient for the in vitro stimulation of Zta-specific CTL in several donors. With peptide-pulsed target cells, we found that CTL from several donors recognize a peptide comprising 15 amino acids. The immune response against this peptide exerted by CTL lines from different donors was found to be restricted by two different molecules of the major histocompatibility complex: HLA-B8 and HLA-Cw6. The latter molecule could for the first time be identified as a restricting element for a CTL response. The epitope of the HLA-B8-restricted CTL could be mapped to an octameric sequence between amino acid positions 190 and 197 of the Zta protein, whereas the minimal epitope of HLA-Cw6-restricted CTL consists of 11 to 15 residues between positions 187 and 201. Thus, the HLA-B8 and HLA-Cw6 epitopes widely overlap but are not completely identical. In vitro stimulation of blood lymphocytes from a panel of HLA-B8-positive or HLA-Cw6-positive virus carriers, using autologous cells pulsed with the Zta peptides comprising the HLA-B8 or HLA-Cw6 epitope, respectively, revealed in both cases that most of these donors developed a Zta-specific cytotoxic activity. These data, as well as the high spread of the major histocompatibility complex molecules HLA-B8 and HLA-Cw6 in most populations, suggest that an efficient CTL response directed against gene products of the immediate-early group of the lytic cycle exists in vivo in a considerable portion of virus carriers. A CTL response against proteins expressed immediately after the switch into the lytic cycle could eliminate lytically activated cells at an early stage and would thus efficiently prevent the production and release of progeny virions.