Eight-week-old female and male NMRI mice treated neonatally with the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol (DES), estradiol-17 b , or tamoxifen displayed an enlarged thymus when compared with controls (approximately 1.5-fold). In control females, either ovariectomy or adrenalectomy increased thymus weight to the level characteristic for DEStreated females, but these endocrine ablations had no significant effect in DES females. The serum estrogen levels were similar in intact DES, ovariectomized DES, and ovariectomized female controls; serum corticosterone was similar in controls and DES females. The expression of the Thy1.2+ marker and the percentages of CD4+CD8+ DP and CD4+ and CD8+ SP cell subsets were similar in thymocyte populations from 8-wk-old controls and DES females; the CD4+ and CD8+ SP subsets were similar in splenocyte populations. The levels of serum immunoglobulin (Ig) G and IgM autoantibodies to cardiolipin showed age-dependent fluctuations but were similar in controls and DES females; however, the IgG autoantibodies in DES females were qualitatively different from those in controls with respect to sensitivity to bovine serum (a source of Beta2-glycoprotein I). Contrary to females, DES-treated males had higher levels of autoantibodies than controls. The delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to oxazolone was similar in controls and DES animals at 8 wk, increased in DES females and males at 6 mo, but was reduced in DES females at 1 yr. Thus, even though adult mice with thymus enlargement after neonatal estrogen treatment do not differ from controls with respect to the expression of the Thy1.2 marker or percentages of CD4+/CD8+ DP or SP subsets in thymus and spleen, qualitative and quantitative differences occur in immune parameters (autoantibodies to cardiolipin) and a T-cell-dependent immune response (DTH).