The mechanism underlying spontaneously resolving allograft rejection following clinical liver transplantation is unidentified. In this process, immunoregulatory T helper (Th)-2 cytokines like IL-4, often identified with down-regulation of the Th1-dependent (IL-2) cell-mediated response, might play a significant but unknown role. For this reason, we analyzed mRNA expression by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 57 biopsies derived from 19 recipients. Specimens included biopsies without evidence of rejection (n = 36), biopsies with histological evidence of rejection (n = 10) not followed by clinical signs of graft rejection, and biopsies with histological rejection that were accompanied with clinical rejection (n = 11), defined by rising serum bilirubin and aspartate amino transaminase (ASAT) levels. Intragraft IL-4 mRNA expression significantly correlated with spontaneously resolving rejections. In 70% (7/10) of these biopsies, IL-4 mRNA was detectable, while only 19% (7/36) of the biopsies without signs of rejection (p < 0.01; Fisher's exact test) and 18% (2/11) of the rejection biopsies concurrent with graft dysfunction expressed the IL-4 gene (p = 0.03). In contrast, IL-2 mRNA expression was not detectable in biopsies derived from the spontaneously resolving rejections. None (0/10) of these samples expressed the IL-2 gene, which was not significantly different from the proportion of biopsies transcribing the IL-2 gene in the absence of rejection (11%, 4/36). IL-2 mRNA expression was found more often in biopsies associated with graft dysfunction (36%, 4/11). These results show that IL-4, in contrast to IL-2 mRNA expression, is associated with spontaneously resolving liver rejection. This suggests that Th2 cells down-regulate the Th1-dependent cell-mediated immune response after clinical liver transplantation.