We have compared in the macaque model the efficacy of the virion-derived glycoprotein of HIV-2ben (HIV-2 gp130) with that of SIVmac251/32H (SIV gp130). The latter vaccination trial was in part combined with vaccinia virus (VV) priming. Both antigen preparations induced a strong humoral, but a weak cellular, immune response. The first challenge was performed with autologous virus grown on a human T cell line. More than 50% of the monkeys immunized with HIV-2 gp130 (five of nine) and 63% of the monkeys immunized with SIV gp130 (five of eight) were protected. All such protected animals received one or two booster immunizations before they were rechallenged either with heterologous HIV-2SBL6669 grown on monkey peripheral blood mononuclear cells or with an ex vivo stock of SIVmac251/32H prepared from the spleen of an SIV-infected macaque and not passaged in vitro. Immunization with HIV-2 gp130 did not protect against the second challenge, but one animal showed limited infection as indicated by positive PCR only. Challenge of the SIV gp130-immunized monkeys with the spleen-derived virus led to infection of three animals; remarkably, one of these was only PCR positive. Two animals were completely protected. Thereby we can exclude the influence of cellular proteins on protective immunity. Priming with VV was not superior to immunization with gp130 alone. Neither at the first nor at the second challenge were the virus-specific humoral and cellular immune responses of the vaccinees clearly correlated with protection. However, neutralizing antibodies may have been important in the SIV gp130-immunized animals at first challenge.