The bcl-2 oncogene product delays apoptotic cell death and prolongs the cell survival. We cloned two bcl-2-related cDNAs from a rat thymus cDNA library by low stringency hybridization with a rat bcl-2 fragment as a probe. One of these, designated bcl-xalpha, was a counterpart of the human bcl-xL reported previously as a bcl-2-related gene (Boise, L. H., Gonzalez-Garcia, M., Postema, C. E. , Ding, L., Lindsten, T., Turka, L. A., Mao, M., Nunez, G., and Thompson, C. B. (1993) Cell 74, 597-608). The other, designated bcl-xbeta, was novel and found to be generated by an unspliced mRNA, whereas bcl-xalpha was generated from a spliced transcript. The splice junction exactly corresponded to that found in the bcl-2 gene. bcl-xbeta was specifically expressed in cerebellum, heart, and thymus. When bcl-xbeta directed by a strong promoter was introduced into an interleukin-3-dependent promyeloid cell line, FDC-P1, DNA fragmentation was observed even in the growing state in the presence of interleukin-3 although not in the control transfectants. This finding suggests that the rat bcl-xbeta gene product promotes apoptosis in the promyeloid cells.