The CMRF-44 monoclonal antibody (MoAb) recognizes an intermediate stage of blood dendritic cell (DC) differentiation as well as mature CD83+ blood DC. Here we describe the use of the CMRF-44 MoAb to monitor the in vitro development of DC-like cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Neither granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) nor GM-CSF plus tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) supported the development of CMRF-44+ cells. However, GM-CSF plus interleukin (IL)-4 generated a substantial number of CMRF-44+ cells among the heterogeneous CD14- myeloid cell population, produced after 7 or 10 days of culture. The addition of TNF-alpha to GM-CSF+IL-4 on the fifth day of culture enhanced the generation of CMRF-44+ cells from days 7 to 14. A concentration of 50 U/mL of IL-4 was sufficient to allow the development of CMRF-44+ cells. The presence of GM-CSF was essential, but a wide range of concentrations (50-800 U/mL) was effective for supporting IL-4-induced generation of CMRF-44+ cells. TNF-alpha at concentrations of 20 or 50 ng/mL induced a maximal increase in the number of CMRF-44+ cells. The CMRF-44+ DCs generated in the presence of GM-CSF+IL-4 were large, irregularly shaped cells with variable CD1a expression and have CD83 transcripts but no CD83 surface expression. Additional TNF-alpha treatment induced prominent dendritic processes and surface expression of CD83 on CMRF-44+ DCs. The CMRF-44+ DCs generated in GM-CSF+IL-4 showed higher allostimulatory activity than CMRF-44 cells but were less efficient at processing and presenting soluble antigen to T-lymphocyte lines. TNF-alpha treatment reduced antigen uptake but increased the allostimulatory activity of CMRF-44+ DCs. CMRF-44+ DC differentiation from blood CD14+ monocytes was not radiosensitive and thus does not involve cell division. We conclude that the MoAb CMRF-44 identifies both intermediate and fully mature stages of monocyte-DC differentiation and may be a useful marker in establishing the optimal timing for antigen loading of in vitro-generated monocyte-derived DCs.