Dietary restriction (DR) markedly extends mean and maximal life span, and retards the rate of biological aging in rodent models; however, it is unknown if these results occur in primate species. The purpose of the current study was to investigate selected immunologic outcomes in Rhesus monkeys subjected to DR for a period of seven years. Similar to observations in mice on DR, lymphopenia occurred in the restricted monkeys. Compared to normally fed controls, the mitogen-induced proliferative responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were reduced in monkeys subjected to DR very early in life (up to 1 year), but not in others restricted in young adulthood (3-5 years). These data indicate that lymphopenia is a shared occurrence in rodents and primates on DR. However, the mitogen-induced proliferative data accumulated in rodents and primates cannot now be compared because PBMC have not been studied long enough or in comparable detail in primates fed restricted diets.