Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) inhibits morphologic differentiation of BALB/c 3T3 T cells as well as other proadipocyte models. Our prior studies suggested that TGF-beta may act only during the early stages of differentiation induction. However, we did not determine whether TGF-beta was differentially effecting expression of any of the various differentiation-specific genes or if it could cause down-regulation of these genes in differentiated cells. Therefore, in the current study we tested the effects of exogenous TGF-beta (0.01-5.0 ng/ml) on morphologic differentiation and on differentiation-dependent gene expression (Northern and slot blot analyses) at various times during differentiation. When induced to differentiate, 3T3 T cells first undergo predifferentiation growth-arrest and from this state molecular, biochemical, and morphological differentiation proceeds. Here it was found that when added prior to the onset of differentiation, TGF-beta was a potent inhibitor of morphologic differentiation as well as of the expression of differentiation-specific genes such as lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD). However, once morphologic differentiation began, TGF-beta was ineffective in blocking differentiation. In addition, exposure of fully differentiated cells to TGF-beta for up to 72 hours caused no decrease of differentiation-specific genes and even a 7-day treatment caused no morphologic dedifferentiation. Tumor necrosis factor also had no detectable effect on fully differentiated cells.