Epidermal Langerhans cells (ELC) are definitively primed to differentiate into dendritic cells (DC). It is unknown at what stage of monocyte development this priming occurs. In a culture system characterized by low paracrine stimulation, i.e. Iscove's modified Dulbecco medium (IMDM) with 2% FCS, we tested the ability of peripheral blood monocytes to turn to the route of the LC-DC lineage. In this system monocytes did not develop significant yeast cell phagocytosis, although mannose receptors were available. However, they became strong stimulators of mannan specific T cell proliferation. Phenotype development was analysed by flow cytometry using the monoclonal antibodies OKT6 (CD1a), IOT2 (HLA-DR), IOM2 (CD14) and the ligand Man-BSA-FITC. CD1a was the first marker which distinguished cultured monocytes from developing macrophages, obtained by addition of 8% human serum. Like cord blood Langerhans cells (CBLC) they internalized OKT6 in deep coated pits. They maintained a phenotype of monocyte derived Langerhans cells (MOLC) during eight days of in vitro culture, expressing CD1a, mannose receptors and HLA-DR and decreasing CD14, if left in their own conditioned medium. MoLC could be converted into macrophages by addition of human serum only within the first four days in vitro. Our data suggest that monocytes acquire an LC phenotype by autocrine stimulation.