A new member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) cytokine family, designated Apo-2 ligand (Apo-21) [1] or TRAIL [2], has been shown recently to induce apoptosis in various tumor cell lines; however, its biological role is unknown. Here, we show that Apo-21, activated apoptosis in T-cell-enriched cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes stimulated by interleukin-2 (IL-2), but not in unstimulated cells. This finding suggests that, like Fas/Apo-1 ligand and TNF [3-5], Apo-2L may play a role in regulating post-stimulation apoptosis of mature lymphocytes. Studies on the mechanism of Apo-2L action demonstrated marked membrane blebbing, a hallmark of apoptosis, within a few minutes of the addition of Apo-2L to tumor cells. Ectopic expression of a dominant negative mutant of FADD, a cytoplasmic protein that mediates death signalling by Fas/Apo-1 and by TNF receptor type 1 (TNFR1) [6-9], inhibited the induction of apoptosis by anti-Fas/Apo-1 antibody, but had little effect on Apo-2L function. In contrast, expression of CrmA, a cowpox virus-derived inhibitor of the Ced-2-like proteases ICE [10] and CPP32/Yama [11,12], blocked the induction of apoptosis by either Apo-2L or anti-Fas/Apo-1 antibody. These results suggest that Apo-2L activates a rapid, FADD-independent pathway to trigger a cell-death programme that requires the function of cysteine proteases such as ICE or CPP32/Yama.