The molecular form and subcellular distribution of acid beta-galactosidase in cultured fibroblasts from patients with beta-galactosidase deficiency (GM1-gangliosidosis, Morquio B disease and galactosialidosis) were studied, using antibodies against three different forms of the human enzyme: a high-molecular-weight multienzymic complex, a recombinant 84-kDa precursor, and a 64-kDa tryptic product of the precursor. The mature enzyme from normal fibroblasts was immunoprecipitated by the anti-complex and anti-64-kDa protein antibodies, but not by the anti-84-kDa precursor one. immunofluorescence staining of normal fibroblasts revealed the granular (lysosomal) distribution with anti-64-kDa protein antibody and the perinuclear reticular distribution with anti-84-kDa precursor antibody, probably representing the Golgi apparatus. Both patterns were demonstrated in Morquio B disease, but the residual enzyme activity was exclusively due to the mature enzyme. In Type 1 galactosialidosis, most of the expressed enzyme was detected as the precursor form with a perinuclear reticular distribution. In type 2 galactosialidosis, more than half of the enzyme activity was due to the mature form with a lysosomal distribution. Fibroblasts from a patient with GM1 gangliosidosis, expressing no beta-galactosidase mRNA, did not react against either anti-64-kDa protein antibody or anti-84-kDa precursor antibody. The combined use of immunoprecipitation and immunostaining was useful for analysing the pathophysiology of the intracellular processing and transport of the mutant beta-galactosidase.