The cellular transcriptional repressor RBP-J kappa associates with the Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigens (EBNAs) determined to be essential for transformation of human primary B lymphocytes. It was demonstrated through genetic analysis that interaction between the viral transactivator EBNA2 and RBP-J kappa is essential for EBV immortalization of primary B lymphocytes, We have shown that the association of RBP-J kappa with intracellular NOTCH1 differs significantly in B and T cells. Immunoprecipitation analyses with antibodies to both the intracellular forms of NOTCH1 and to RBP-J kappa demonstrated that little or no RBP-J kappa is associated with NOTCH1 in B cell lines compared to the RBP-J kappa associated with NOTCH1 in T cell lines and was further demonstrated in human primary lymphocytes. Additionally, EBNA2 can compete with intracellular NOTCH1 for binding to GST-RBP-J kappa in vitro. Northern blot for the cellular gene hairy enhancer of split (HES1) demonstrated that HES1 is upregulated in the EBV transformed lymphoblastoid cells expressing high levels of EBNA2 and in a T cell line SupT1 overexpressing intracellular activated NOTCH1. Hence, EBNAP may be able to compete for the available pool of RBP-J kappa more effectively in human B cells than in T cells and provides a possible explanation for the ability of EBV to potently and efficiently infect and immortalize human B cells.