Although clinical experience and in vitro data provide evidence of an anti-leukemic activity of T cells, there are few examples of recognition of leukemic cells by tumor-specific T cells in vitro. Tumor antigens encoded by the MAGE genes are useful tools to study this recognition. We tested the sensitivity to recognition and lysis by anti-MAGE CTL clones of MAGE-A1 positive cell lines HL60 and K562, after transfection with an HLA-A1 construct, and of fresh leukemic blasts from 10 HLA-A2 patients, after incubation with a peptide encoded by gene MAGE-A3. The presentation of MAGE antigens by leukemic cell lines and fresh leukemic blasts induced TNF secretion and cytotoxicity by MAGE-specific CD8(+) CTL clones. The amount of peptide presented by the leukemic blasts, more than the level of expression of HLA class I, adhesion or costimulatory molecules, was the major limiting factor for recognition. These data indicate that leukemic cells may be targeted by T cells showing specificity for a leukemia antigen.