IL-4 receptor alpha chain (IL-4R alpha)-deficient mice were generated by gene-targeting in BALB/c embryonic stem cells. Mutant mice showed a loss of IL-4 signal transduction and functional activity. The lack of IL-4R alpha resulted in markedly diminished, but not absent, TH2 responses after infection with the helminthic parasite Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. CD4(+), CD62L-high, and CD62L-low T cell populations from uninfected TL-4R alpha(-/-) mice were isolated by cell sorting, Upon primary stimulation by T cell receptor cross-linkage, the CD62L-low, bur not the CD62L-high, cells secreted considerable amounts of IL-4, which was strikingly enhanced upon 4-day culture with anti-CDS in the presence or absence of IL-4. CD62L-low cells isolated from IL-4R alpha(-/-), beta(2)-microglobulin(-/-) double homozygous mice produced less IL-4 than did either IL-4R alpha(-/-) or wild-type mice. These results indicate that an IL-4-independent, beta(2)-microglobulin-dependent pathway exists through which the CD62L-low CD4(+) population has acquired IL-4-producing capacity in vivo, strongly suggesting that these cells are NK T cells.