Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is a highly conserved peptide with growth-inhibitory activity in multiple normal and transformed cell types. Signal transduction is mediated through the receptor complex, consisting of two active seronine or threonine kinases (TGF-beta-receptor I and II) and the receptor-associated proteins betaglycan (TGF-beta-receptor III) and endoglin. In this study, we assessed the analysis of the role of TGF-beta and the transcription of the genes for TGF-beta and its receptor in highly purified leukemic B-cell precursors (BCPs) of patients with common acute lymphoblastic leukemia (cALL). Leukemic BCPs were positive for gene transcription of TGF-beta (9/9), the TGF-beta-receptor I (9/9), the TGF-beta-receptor II (6/6), betaglycan (5/6), and endoglin (6/6). Incubation with TGF-beta significantly reduced the cell viability of leukemic BCPs by a mean of 45% (p = 0.0009). The reduction of cell viability was associated with the induction of apoptosis by a mean of 31%. TGF-beta caused significant suppression of the S phase (p = 0.002) and accumulation in the G0/G1 phase (p = 0.0005). It also reduced expression of the adhesion surface receptor CD18 and the Fas antigen CD95 from 58% to 40% and from 48% to 27%, respectively. The data indicate that TGF-beta is a negative growth signal in leukemic BCPs and point to an additional role of TGF-beta as an immunomodulatory cytokine, suggesting a complex role of TGF-beta in the leukemogenesis of cALL.