In enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, the eaeA gene produces a 94-kDa outer membrane protein called intimin which has been shown to be necessary but not sufficient to produce the attaching-and-effacing lesion. The purpose of this study was to characterize the intimin specified by the eae-4 allele of the enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) serotype O157:H7 strain CL8 and to determine its role in adherence. The carboxyl-terminal 266 amino acids of the CL8 intimin were expressed as a protein fusion with glutathione S-transferase, which was used to raise antiserum in rabbits. The antiserum reacted in Western immunoblots with a 97-kDa outer membrane protein of EHEC strains of serogroups O5, O26, O111, and O157 and enteropathogenic E. coli strains of serogroups O55 and O127. Surface labelling of CL8 with I-125 showed that intimin was surface exposed. An eaeA insertional inactivation mutant of CL8 was produced and was designated CL8-KO1. Total adherence of CL8-KO1 to HEp-2 cells was not significantly different from that of CL8, but CL8-KO1 gave a negative result in the fluorescent actin staining test. The eaeA gene expressed alone in E. coli HB101 also gave a negative fluorescent actin staining test result. The eae-4 gene of CL8 was able to complement the eaeA deletion mutation in CVD206. We conclude that the product of the EHEC eaeA gene is a 97-kDa surface-exposed protein and propose that it be designated intimin(O157). Sherman et al. described a 94-kDa outer membrane protein which played an important role in adherence of E. coli O157:H7 (Infect. Immun. 59:890-899, 1991). Western immunoblotting and indirect fluorescent antibody studies showed that the protein described by Sherman et al. is not intimin.