Host-virus relationships were examined in mice from the two mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV)-infected strains SWISS MB+ and RIII, which harbour the same MMTV variant, and from the derived sublines Swiss MB- and RIIIf, which were freed of milk-borne MMTV by foster-nursing. These two strains are not phylogenetically related, the SWISS strain bearing the endogenous Mtv-3 locus in its DNA. In RIII and SWISS MB+ mice, the incidence of early mammary tumors, which was of 96% and 8%, respectively, was correlated to the level of MMTV expression in milk. In the SWISS MB-line, a non-coordinate expression of the provirus associated with the Mtv-3 locus was observed in the mammary glands, the salivary glands and the spleen. This expression was not tumorigenic and was characterized by the presence of the p28 gag antigen and the absence of the gp52 env antigen, except, however, in mammary glands of elder mice where traces of gp52 were found. In the mammary glands of SWISS MB+ mice, the expression of the Mtv-3 locus was masked by large amounts of antigens resulting from exogenous virus expression. RIIIf mice were MMTV-negative. Viral antigens coexisted with anti-MMTV antibodies in the serum of infected and tumor-bearing mice, but not in the form of immune complexes as verified by a method that allowed to detect specific antigen-containing-soluble immune complexes. An anti-MMTV serum reactivity was also detected in SWISS MB- and RIIIf mice. However, the serum response was higher in the two SWISS lines than in the two RIII lines. Except in tumor-bearing mice, the anti-MMTV response was not significantly modified by the presence of exogenous virus and thus resulted essentially from exposure to endogenous MMTV expression. In experimental infection studies, RIII mice were more susceptible to MMTV infection than SWISS mice. The correlation between resistance to MMTV infection and serum response to endogenous MMTV expression, suggests that the non-tumorigenic expression of an endogenous provirus can protect at least partially, against exogenous MMTV infection.