Antigen recognition was analyzed at the single-cell level by using for the first time T cells which were not altered by in vitro selection, transfection or immortalization. The first consequence of antigen recognition by ex vivo naive CD4+ T cells from T cell receptor (TCR)-transgenic mice is the formation of a "contact zone" with the B cell presenting the antigen. The T cell intracellular calcium (Ca2+) response begins after a delay of 30 s on average, following the formation of the contact zone. The T cell response is entirely inhibited by either protein tyrosine kinase or actin polymerization inhibitors but, surprisingly, it is insensitive to inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase. Moreover, inhibition of microtubule polymerization and use of Ca2+-free medium do not prevent the beginning of the T cell response, but do reduce the stability of the contact zone and/or the amplitude of the Ca2+ plateau. The critical involvement of the cytoskeleton in antigen recognition on B cells introduces a checkpoint in T cell activation: the initial TCR engagement triggers a Ca2+ response only after an amplification step corresponding to a cytoskeleton-controlled increase in the number of engaged TCR.