Interleukin-1 (IL-1) is a proinflammatory cytokine produced by blood-borne and resident inflammatory lung tissue involved in the. thrombotic occlusion of the pulmonary microcirculation and the increase of the vascular permeability following a wide variety of injuries and sepsis. The locally accentuated, organ-related activation of this cytokine seems to be responsible for the development of acute lung injury, The present study was conducted to determine if IL-1 beta was produced in an ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) rat model subjected to lung injury. We measured sequential perfusate levels of IL-1 beta by ELISA and we measured IL-1 gene expression in the rat lung tissue by a reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction method. Little IL-1 beta gene expression was observed in normal rat lung tissue. Perfusate IL-1 beta slightly increased 2 h after induced ischemia and 3 h after reperfusion, IL-1 beta gene expression rapidly increased as early as 30 min after ischemia and continued to increase for up to 120 min, IL-1 beta gene expression was dramatically upregulated during reperfusion after cessation of ischemia, reached a peak at 1 h, and then gradually decreased (2 to 3 h) to near baseline levels, During ischemia, the increased IL-1 gene expression was not significantly different between the ventral and dorsal sites of the lung. However, IL-1 gene expression markedly increased on the dorsal part (the dependent site for a rat in a supine position) after reperfusion. From these results, it appears that IL-1 may have an important role in I/R lung injury.