Longitudinal in vitro assays related to cell-mediated immunity were performed in patients following allogeneic (32) or autologous (15) bone marrow transplantation (BMT). In both groups of reconstituted patients, low CD4+/CD8+ T cell ratio and weak allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reactions were found in the first 6 months after BMT, progressively reaching values similar to controls (bone marrow donors or unrelated individuals). In contrast, a strong generation of allogeneic cytotoxic cells, assessed by the number of lytic units per 10(6) cells, was frequently found (18/38 patients tested in both groups) in the first 4 months, despite the quantitative deficit of the CD4+ subset. This in vitro differentiation was found to be independent of in vivo acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and chronic GVHD in allo-transplanted patients. As also documented in autologous recipients, this observation suggests that this phenomenon could be, at least partially, related to the transplantation per se. Preliminary characterization of the effector cells indicates that they belong to the CD8+ subset and that their differentiation is interleukin-2-dependent. Experimental depletion of the CD4+ subset in normal subjects did not increase the number of lytic units in allogeneic cultures. This implies qualitative differences between BMT recipients and normal subjects, namely in CD8+ subset: i.e. that following BMT early CD8+ T cells appear to produce their own growth factor (IL-2), while in normal adult individuals, such autocrine CD8+ T cells, if present, are very rare.