A phenotypic analysis of the lympho-hemopoietic cells which occur in the liver of 13-day-old fetal rats was achieved by flow cytometry in an attempt to further characterize the rat lymphoid progenitor cells. A small fraction of rat 13-day-old fetal liver (r13FL) cells, which weakly expressed the leukocyte common antigen CD45, constituted a homogeneous Thy-1(hl), CD71(-), CD44(+), MHC class I+, CD43(+) cell subpopulation negative for CD45RC, CD3, TCR alpha beta, TCR gamma delta, CD2, CD5, CD4, CD8, CD25, CD28, NKR-P1a and slg. On the contrary, the CD45(-) cells were a heterogeneous cell subset which expressed Thy-1, CD71 and CD44 at distinct levels. After MACS separation, the Cd45(+) r13FL cells, but not the CD45(-) cell subset, in vitro repopulated 14-day-old SCID mouse fetal thymic lobes providing rat T cells, both TCR alpha beta and TdRyG, NK cells, and thymic dendritic cells but not B lymphocytes. Interestingly, NKR-P1a(lo) TCR alpha beta(+) or TCR gamma delta(+) cells developed in the xenogeneic cultures, and a rare CD4(+)CD8(+) double-positive subpopulation among the TCR gamma delta-expressing cells accumulated in the oldest cultures. These results are discussed from the double perspective of the nature of the precursor cells which colonize the fetal thymus and the relevance of the xenogeneic SCID mouse fetal thymic microenvironment for supporting rat lymphopoiesis.