Class-I-MHC molecules are divided into class-Ia molecules, which play major roles in recognition of virus-infected cells, graft rejection and immune responses against tumors, and class-Ib molecules, which are less polymorphic and may be responsible for presenting unique classes of peptides. Our report characterizes RadLV-induced thymic T-cell lines that differ both in their tumorigenic potential and in the level of protein for class-Ia and TL genes. The PD1.1 cell line is CD4-CD8+ and expresses relatively high levels of class-I as compared with the CD4+CD8+ PD1.2 cell line. These class-I-expression levels correlate with thymocytes and splenic T cells of the same phenotype, except that normal cells fail to express TL3b. Interferon-treated PD1.2 cells demonstrate significantly lower levels of class-I expression than do interferon-treated PD1.1 cells, and were shown to contain large amounts of degraded class-I mRNA, at least some of which was TL in origin. These RNA products were not detected in PD1.1 cells, suggesting the existence of a mechanism controlling cell-specific and gene-specific mRNA stability. Such RadLV-induced cell lines provide a means for obtaining stage-specific T cells, which can be used for studying the regulation of class-I gene expression during T-cell differentiation, as well as factors that differentially regulate class-Ia and class-Ib expression and are potentially useful for studying T-cell differentiation in general.