K-1-21 is a murine monoclonal antibody that reacts with human kappa-light chains in free form but not when they are associated with immunoglobulin heavy chains. K-1-21 was unexpectedly shown to bind to a determinant, STA (Sezary T cell antigen), detected by immunofluorescence in the cytoplasm but not on the surface of Sezary T cells isolated from peripheral blood (4/4 cases) and in Sezary T cells from lymph node and bone marrow (one patient). STA was detected in F2/F7, CCRF-CEM, Molt-4, and CCRF-HSB (four human T ALL cell lines), in JURKAT (a human T cell leukemia line), and in MLA144 (a Gibbon T cell lymphoma line). It also occurred in Leu-3a+ antigen-specific T cell clones (6/6 tested). Moreover, although STA was absent from freshly isolated normal T cells, its expression could be evoked in E+ cells from peripheral blood by in vitro culture with phytohemagglutinin. Thus, STA appears to be a cytoplasmic marker for activated T cells. Cytoplasmic inhibition immunofluorescence studies indicated that K-1-21 binding to STA in Sezary cells or T cell lines was inhibited by preincubation of the K-1-21 antibody with purified kappa-Bence Jones protein. STA from radiolabeled MLA144 cell lysates was immunoprecipitated by K-1-21 and was identified on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions as a protein of m.w. 57,000. Additional experiments are underway to define the molecular basis of the interesting cross-reactivity between a determinant in T cells and the K-1-21 reactive epitope on free kappa-light chains.