We used in situ hybridization to study Ig mRNA levels in murine peritoneal and splenic B cells. Ig mRNA production fell into three distinct groups: low, intermediate, and high. Splenic B cells primarily exhibited low levels characteristic of resting B cells or high Ig mRNA levels characteristic of plasma cells. In contrast, a significant fraction of peritoneal B cells exhibited intermediate Ig mRNA levels. Intermediate Ig mRNA was T cell dependent in that congenic nu/nu mice had far fewer peritoneal cells expressing the intermediate Ig message than their wild type counterparts. CD5+ CD11b+ IgMbright+ peritoneal B cells were found to be mainly responsible for the production of intermediate Ig mRNA levels. The peritoneal CD5- CD11b+ IgMbright+ "sister" B cell subpopulation contained a lower percentage of intermediate Ig mRNA-producing B cells. CD5-CD11b-IgMdull+ "conventional" B cells produced negligible levels of Ig mRNA, comparable to those of unfractionated splenic B cells. Northern analysis showed that the majority of Ig mRNA expressed in the peritoneum is of the membrane rather than the secreted form. Consistent with that result, in short-term culture, peritoneal cells showed markedly less Ig secretion than did spleen cells. These studies describe novel Ig mRNA expression by peritoneal B cells and emphasize that within the peritoneal cavity, B cells do not tend to become antibody-secreting cells.