Non-covalent association between at least two polypeptides, alpha (p55) and beta (p70), yields a high-affinity interleukin 2 receptor (IL-2R). Recent findings suggest that the beta-chain can mediate IL-2 signals on its own, while the alpha-chain is not involved in IL-2 signal transduction. To study the role of the beta-chain, directly, we transfected with the human IL-2R beta-chain cDNA a murine IL-6-dependent B cell hybridoma, F12-28, which originally did not express IL-2R. We established a stable transformant, beta E12, expressing the beta-chain (Kd = 1300 pM, 3000 sites/cell) in the absence of any detectable alpha-chain. We showed that (i) beta E12 manifested the intermediate affinity IL-2 binding, which was completely blocked with anti-human beta-chain antibody (Mik-beta 1); (ii) beta E12 acquired an ability to proliferate in response to IL-2 (greater than 0.1 nM) in a dose-dependent manner. These results clearly demonstrate that the beta-chain itself is directly involved in IL-2 signal transduction in the absence of the alpha-chain. Our results also suggest that a certain IL-6-dependent B cell line possesses cellular components) capable of transducing IL-2 signals.