The C3a molecule is an anaphylatoxin of the C system with a wide spectrum of proinflammatory effects predominantly on cells of myeloid origin. In this study we investigated the expression of the high affinity receptor for C3a (C3aR) in human T lymphocytes using receptor-specific mAb. C3aR expression was detected in CD4(+) and CD8(+) blood- or skin-derived T cell clones (TCC) from birch pollen-sensitized patients with atopic dermatitis. No significant difference in C3aR expression in CD4(+) or CD8(+) TCCs could be observed. In contrast to C3a(desArg), C3a led to a transient calcium flux in TCCs expressing the C3aR, whereas C3aR-negative TCCs were unreactive. Circulating T cells from patients suffering from severe inflammatory skin diseases expressed the C3aR, whereas no expression of C3aR could be found in unstimulated T lymphocytes from patients with mild inflammatory skin diseases or from healthy individuals. Type I IFNs, which are potent stimulators of cellular immunity, were identified as up-regulators of C3aR expression in vitro in freshly isolated or cloned T lymphocytes. Moreover, C3aR(+) T cells were found at the sites of injection in IFN-beta-treated patients with multiple sclerosis. These data provide direct evidence for the expression of C3aR on activated human T lymphocytes; this may point to a biological function of C3a in T cell-dependent diseases.