Protein profiles of somatic extracts from different developmental stages and excretory and secretory products of third-state larvae of Angiostrongylus cantonensis were analyzed and characterized by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate under both reduced and unreduced conditions. Immunological identification of common and stage-specific antigens was determined by radioimmunoprecipitation using chronically infected rat serum and antisera from rats immunized with somatic extracts of third-stage larvae and adult female worms. The somatic extracts of first-and third-stage larvae and of adult worms were found to be highly complex, each consisting of more than 20 different peptides with molecular weights varying from higher than 130,000 to 8,200 daltons. Most proteins were composed of single polypeptide chains. Polypeptides with molecular weights of 80,000, 39,500 and 22,000 daltons were present in more than one developmental stages and were antigenically related. Those with molecular weight of 15,500 dalton, was present primarily in L3S and its possible usefulness in immunodiagnosis of infection that occurs in man was discussed.