We have used mRNA differential display PCR to search for genes induced in activated T cells and we identified a gene encoding an alpha2,6-sialyltransferase (ST6GalNAc IV) that is rapidly induced in lymphocytes after antigen or mitogen stimulation. The 3.6 kb full-length cDNA clone (MK45) obtained contained a single open reading frame encoding a 302 amino acid protein and a 2.5 kb 3' untranslated region. MK45 expression in in vivo-activated CD8 T cells reached the highest level 4 h after antigen triggering and then declined rapidly to nearly base levels within 45 h. Northern blot analysis further revealed that MK45 expression was also induced in LPS-activated B cells and antigen-triggered CD4 T cells in vitro. MK45 expression was low or undetectable in most other mouse tissues examined, when compared to activated lymphocytes. Importantly, the mRNA expression level of other sialyltransferases remained largely unchanged during the early stage of lymphocyte activation. Finally, increased ecto-sialyltransferase activity and an altered sialylation pattern were demonstrated on the cell surface of early activated CD8 T cells. Our report identifies a candidate sialyltransferase gene that is involved in the early alteration of the sialylation pattern of cell surface molecules in activated lymphocytes.