A N-acetyl-D-galactosamine (GalNAc) specific bacterial lectin-like substance from Eikenella corrodens 1073 (EcLS) was found to have potent mitogenic activity when cultured with splenocytes from BALB/c mice. The results indicated that B lymphocytes are the major cell type responding to EcLS. The mitogenic activity of EcLS was dose-dependent, and the optimal concentration was around 5 micrograms/ml. The mitogenic activity did not appear to be due to a bacterial endotoxin, as GalNAc inhibited the mitogenic activity of EcLS, but did not inhibit the activity of lipopolysaccharide isolated from E. corrodens. EcLS stimulated murine B lymphocytes not only to proliferate, but also to differentiate into antibody-secreting cells, as demonstrated by the production of immunoglobulin by B lymphocytes stimulated with EcLS. These findings suggest that EcLS is a novel lectin that not only induces B lymphocyte proliferation, but also differentiation.