A human transient expression system was used to measure the influence of simian virus 40 T antigen and adenovirus E1a proteins on the activation of alpha interferon subtype 1 (IFN-alpha 1) and IFN-beta promoters linked to the reporter chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. Large T-antigen production, amplified by expression plasmid replication in transfected 293 cells, was able to trans activate the IFN-beta promoter 5- to 10-fold, increasing both the constitutive and Sendai virus-induced levels of expression. Surprisingly, the previously quiescent transfected IFN-alpha 1 promoter in T-antigen-expressing cells displayed a level of inducibility similar to IFN-beta. The endogenous IFN-alpha 1 gene was also inducible to a limited extent in cells expressing T antigen. A truncated IFN-beta promoter deleted to position -37 relative to the CAP site was neither inducible nor trans activated by T antigen, suggesting that sequences required for efficient induction were also needed for trans activation. Since 293 cells express adenoviral E1a proteins, experiments were also performed in HeLa cells to assess the relative contribution of T antigen and E1a proteins to IFN trans activation. In HeLa cells, T-antigen coexpression increased the constitutive level of IFN-beta and IFN-alpha 1 promoter activity without augmenting relative inducibility. Coexpression of T antigen and E1a proteins did not have a cooperative effect on type 1 IFN expression.