Owing to its autofluorescence properties, green fluorescent protein (GFP) has aroused increasing interest as a marker system for many research applications. In this study we investigated the suitability of the "enhanced" GFP (EGFP), a mutant version of GFP optimized for flow cytometry and microscopy detection, as a reporter gene for retroviral transduction protocols. EGFP was shown to display a bright and stably maintained emission pattern in transfected GP+envAm12 packaging cells. Stable fluorescent emission was observed as well after transduction in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts and in the human Jurkat T cell line, in which EGFP was shown to confer no deleterious effect or growth disadvantage on the expressing cells. Moreover, EGFP expression could be detected after short-term retroviral exposure, thus allowing a rapid and quantitative retroviral titering assay, alternative to the standard colony-formation procedure. Most importantly, we showed the feasibility of EGFP as a marker gene in retroviral-mediated transduction of primary lymphoid precursors. In particular, transduction of CD34+CD1- human thymocytes by short-term cocultivation yielded up to 30% of EGFP-expressing cells, while maintaining CD34 expression levels. Finally, when cultured under multicytokine-supported conditions, such transduced intrathymic progenitors were shown to efficiently generate lymphoid-related dendritic cells, which displayed a distinct EGFP expression. Therefore, because of its rapid and easy detectability and its nontoxic characteristics, EGFP proves itself to be a valuable reporter gene by allowing the transduction of multipotential progenitors and by being compatible with the developmental programs of lymphoid lineage generation.