We investigated the expression of a monoclonal antibody (HML-1) defined antigen that appears on human intestinal T-lymphocytes in HTLV-I-related disease. We studied 25 ATL, and 24 healthy HTLV-I carriers. Patients with acute ATL showed a variety of the expression of the HML-1 antigen (range 0.4-74.8%). HML-1 expression on mononuclear cells (MNCs) in blood from patients with chronic ATL ranged from 1.7-43.6% (mean 13.5%). This level of expression was less than that of patients with acute ATL, but not significantly. In patients with smoldering ATL, the degree of patients with acute ATL, but not significantly. In patients with smoldering ATL, the degree of expression ranged from 1.6-13.3% (mean 8.0%). In contrast to patients with acute ATL, MNCs from patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), and B-cell type chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) did not express the HML-1 antigen, except for the 2 patients with ALL. Healthy HTLV-I carriers and healthy controls also were negative for HML-1 reactivity. In acute ATL, patients with gastrointestinal tract infiltration tended to have high expression of the HML-1 epitope. After stimulation with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), healthy HTLV-I carriers showed significantly increased expression of the HML-1 epitope (P < 0.05). Recently, the beta 7 integrin family has been found to play a specific role in mucosal localization or adhesion, and HML-1 protein was found to match the deduced beta 7 N-terminal sequence. We propose that the cellular gene responsible for HML-1 epitope expression may, like IL-2, IL-2R, etc., be transactivated by infection with HTLV-I, and HML-1 antigen gene expression by HTLV-I infection may lead to infiltration of ATL cells with highly expressed HML-1 epitope into the gut mucosa.