Prothymosin alpha (ProT alpha), a polypeptide containing the sequence of thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1) at its NH2-terminus, has been isolated from calf thymocytes in a concentration in the order of that found in the whole thymic gland. As deduced from the analysis of their tryptic peptides, calf ProT alpha differs from the rat polypeptide at least in an alanine residue replacing valine at position 92. Thymocytes cultured in a radioactive medium exhibit an important secretory activity, ProT alpha being one of the products synthesized and exported to the culture medium. Large and small thymocyte subpopulations from calf and rat differ in their capacity to synthesize ProT alpha. The polypeptide is produced in a major concentration by large thymocytes. However, all the calf and rat thymocyte subpopulations show a similar capacity to secrete ProT alpha, the amount of the newly synthesized polypeptide recovered from cell culture supernatants being 80-90% of that found in thymocyte extracts.