Previous studies have demonstrated that murine thymocytes proliferate in the presence of submitogenic concentrations of phytohemagglutinin-P (PHA-P) and various cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-4 (IL-4), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and interleukin-6 (IL-6). We report that C3H/HeJ thymocytes stimulated with PHA-P and IL-1, IL-4, or TNF-alpha secrete significant levels of IL-6 as determined on B9 hybridoma cells. The possibility that thymocyte proliferation induced by these cytokines was mediated through IL-6 was investigated utilizing a neutralizing monoclonal antibody against murine IL-6, MP5 20F3.1. The results demonstrate that MP5 20F3.1 inhibited the proliferative response of thymocytes and B9 hybridoma cells to recombinant MuIL-6 (but not HuIL-6) and neutralized the endogenous IL-6 produced in the thymocyte cultures, but did not have any measurable effects on the proliferative responses induced by IL-1, IL-4, or TNF-alpha. Although the level of endogeneously produced IL-6 did not play a measurable role in the proliferative response induced by TNF-alpha, the addition of higher concentrations of IL-6 augmented the proliferation of murine thymocytes induced by rMu TNF-alpha. In addition, recombinant human transforming growth factor-beta 1 (rHu TGF-beta 1) significantly inhibited thymocyte proliferation induced by HuIL-1, rMuIL-4, rMuIL-6, and rMuTNF-alpha. The studies suggest that IL-1, IL-4, or TNF-alpha mediate a proliferative signal on murine thymocytes independent of IL-6 and that the proliferative signals provided by these cytokines as well as IL-6 are inhibitable by rHu TGF-beta 1.