Overexpression of the c-myc oncogene is frequently accompanied by downregulation of Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC, HLA in humans) class I antigens. In human melanoma c-myc overexpression downmodulates HLA-B expression, whereas HLA-A is hardly affected. Repression of HLA-B is mediated through the core promoter, containing a CAAT-box and a non-conventional TATA-box. We show evidence that in transient transfection assays the HLA-A2 and HLA-B7 promoters are repressed by c-myc to the same extent. Therefore, other sequences of the HLA-A and HLA-B genes, possibly intron/exon sequences, should contribute to the locus B-specificity of the downregulation. Furthermore, c-myc does not seem to alter binding of protein complexes to the CAAT- or TATA-box of HLA-B7 or HLA-A2 in gel retardation assays. Comparison of promoters repressed by c-myc reveals a weak consensus sequence of the initiator (Inr) element: TCA(+1)YYYNY. The presence of a TCA sequence in the initiator region of the MHC class I promoter makes downregulation by c-myc through the Inr likely. We speculate that the Inr contributes to MHC class I promoter activity by stimulating recruitment of TFIID to the weak, non-conventional TATA-box, thereby making it susceptible to repression by c-myc through the Inr.