We studied the in vitro production of rheumatoid factor (RF) by spleen cells of normal adult mice. IgG RF cross-reactive with rabbit IgG was produced in response to immune complexes of TNP-lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with murine IgG anti-TNP antibody in an Fc-specific manner, but not to a mixture of IgG and LPS. Antibody-uncomplexed LPS induced little IgG RF production, but suppressed the subsequent IgG RF response to antibody-complexed LPS, whereas IgM RF was induced by either LPS or antibody-complexed LPS. The IgG RF production followed as rapid a time course as IgM RF production; the rate of IgG RF production reached its maximum soon after a lag period of 1 day and declined after 5 days. Treatment of splenic B cells from BALB/c mice with anti-Ly-1.2 antibody and rabbit complement resulted in a selective reduction of IgM RF production by 90%, with little effect of IgG RF production. These results suggest that IgG RF is derived primarily from CD5- memory B cells which have been developed in normal mice by an unknown mechanism. Unlike the CD5+ precursor cells for IgM RF, these memory cells are unresponsive to polyclonal stimulation by LPS but are activated by simultaneous stimulation by aggregated Fc epitopes and the mitogenic stimulus from LPS.