Ig-alpha of the B-cell antigen receptor complex forms a heterodimeric structure with Ig-beta on the plasma membrane of B-lymphocytes and is apparently involved in signal transduction during the activation of B-cells. Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is predominantly a B-cell tropic retrovirus, which induces persistent lymphocytosis and leukemia/lymphoma of B-cell lineage in cattle. To understand the mechanisms of proliferation and tumorigenesis of bovine B-cells that are associated with BLV infection, we investigated the B-cell antigen receptor complex, especially bovine mb-1 encoding the bovine Ig-alpha protein. We isolated a full-length bovine mb-1 cDNA clone encoding 223 amino acid residues. The deduced amino acid sequence of the bovine mb-1 showed extensive homology with those of human and murine mb-1. The cytoplasmic tail of the bovine mb-1 also contained a consensus motif (D/E-X7-D/E-X2-L/I-X7-Y-X2-L/I) that may interact with the SH2 domain of src-type kinase. Interestingly, a similar consensus sequence motif was found in the BLV gp30env, although the overall sequence similarity between bovine mb-1 and BLVgp30 was not significant. Furthermore, elevated levels of mb-1 transcript were detected in various bovine leukemia/lymphoma cell lines. These results indicated that the proliferation of B-cells associated with BLV-infection may be related to abnormal signal transduction through the B-cell antigen receptor complex.