In the present study a cell culture model of primary human osteoblasts based on degrees of confluence was investigated by measuring basal and 1,25(OH)2D3stimulated levels of the osteoblast characteristic proteins alkaline phosphatase (AP), procollagen I-peptide (PICP), and osteocalcin (OC), as well as the corresponding gene expression. Primary osteoblast-like cell cultures from seven donors were treated in the second passage with 1,25(OH)2D3 (5 x 10(-8) M for 48 hours) and investigated at four stages of confluence (stage I 50%, stage II 75%, stage III 100%, and stage IV 7 days postconfluence). In untreated cultures passing through the different stages of confluence, we saw a 1.8-fold increase of AP activity, a 2. 3-fold increase of OC secretion, but a decrease of PICP levels to 0. 36-fold. Gene expression showed only minor variation between the different confluence stages. 1,25(OH)2D3 did not significantly affect PICP production. Alkaline phosphatase protein was stimulated during proliferation until confluence, with no effect thereafter. Surprisingly, OC secretion and mRNA expression were stimulated in all four stages to the same absolute level independent of basal values. We conclude that our results correspond to other studies showing differentiation-stage dependent changes of basal levels of osteoblast-specific proteins. However, 1,25(OH)2D3 stimulation decreased the confluence-dependent difference for AP and abolished it for osteocalcin, thus leading to a more differentiated phenotype of the osteoblast. Therefore, 1,25(OH)2D3 stimulation might improve the reproducibility of results obtained at different confluence stages from cultures of clinical samples.