Human leukocyte interferon (HuLeIF) can express its antiviral activity on both human and bovine cells. The rates of inactivation of HuLeIF by α-chymotrypsin, as expressed on human and bovine cells, are not the same: the ability to induce activity on human cells is lost significantly more rapidly than the activity detected on bovine cells; usually a margin of greater than one hundred-fold exists after α-chymotrypsin treatment. HuLeIF, when subjected to analysis on 10% SDS-PAGE, can be separated into two molecular weight species, one having apparent molecular weight of approximately 21,000 daltons, the other 18,000 daltons. A more rapidly migrating form (molecular weight 16,500 daltons) can also be isolated, which is considerably more active on bovine cells than on human cells. α-chymotrypsin-treated samples analyzed by SDS-PAGE show a clear separation of the activities expressed on human and bovine cells. The residual activity detected on human cells is isolated only in the 21,000 component while the activity found on bovine cells is recovered only as the 16,500 dalton species. © 1979.