A 4-year-old girl developed numerous tense blisters on the body. The blisters healed without scarring. Histopathological and immunofluorescence studies showed findings consistent with linear immunoglobulin A (IgA) bullous dermatosis of childhood. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed deposition of IgA in the lamina lucida of the basement membrane zone of the dermal-epidermal junction. Circulating IgA autoantibody was positive at the titre of 1 : 128 and recognized the antigens located on epidermal sites of 1 mol/l NaCl-split skin. Immunofluorescence staining of cultured normal human fibroblasts and cultured DJM-1 cells (derived from human squamous cell carcinoma of skin) with the patient's sera demonstrated that both of these cells synthesize the antigens in vitro, although fibroblasts produce the antigens more abundantly. When DJM-1 cells were injected intracutaneously into nude mice, the antigens recognized by the sera were present mainly around the tumour cell islands in a linear pattern, while the dermal-epidermal junction of mouse skin was negative, suggesting that epidermal cells may contribute directly to synthesis and deposition of the antigens at the basement membrane. By immunoprecipitation using cultured normal human fibroblasts, the patient's sera could precipitate at least two specific molecules at 100-kDa and 145-kDa molecular weight.