CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes contribute to viral and autoimmune myocarditis and cardiac allograft rejection. The role of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen (CTLA)-4 as a negative regulator of CD4+ T cells is well defined, yet CTLA-4 regulation of CD8+ T cells is less clear. We studied CTLA-4 regulation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes in a transgenic model of CD8+ T-cell-mediated myocarditis. We generated CTLA-4(-/-) Rag 2(-/-) OT-1 mice, the CD8+ T cells of which express an ovalbumin (OVA) peptide-specific, class I major histocompatibility complex-restricted T-cell receptor. CTLA-4(-/-Tc12) OT-1 effectors, differentiated with interleukin-12 present, are hyperproliferative in vitro, compared with CTLA-4(+/+)Tc12 OT-1 controls. Transfer of low doses of CTLA-4(-/-Tc12) OT-1 cells to cMy-mOVA mice, which express OVA on cardiac myocytes, causes severe myocarditis, with 99% mortality, compared with no mortality after transfer of low doses of CTLA-4(+/+)Tc12 OT-1 cells. High doses of CTLA-4(+/+)Tc12 cells cause lethal myocarditis in cMy-mOVA mice, but high doses of CTLA-4(+/+)Tc0 CTL, generated without interleukin-12, are hypoproliferative within the cardiac-draining lymph node and do not significantly infiltrate the heart. In contrast, CTLA-4(-/-Tc0) cytotoxic T lymphocytes do proliferate in the cardiac-draining lymph node and diffusely infiltrate the heart. Nonetheless, high doses of CTLA-4(-/-Tc0) cells cause only limited tissue damage, and the disease is not lethal. These data show that CTLA-4 regulates myocarditic CD8+ T cell responses and that CTLA-4 deficiency partly overcomes a differentiation block that exists when naïve CD8+ T cells are stimulated without interleukin-12. Therefore, targeting CTLA-4 solely or in conjunction with interleukin-12 could influence effector CD8+ T cell responses in therapeutically beneficial ways.