Three cell surface components of mouse embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells, F9 antigens and the receptors to the lectins FBP and PNA, have been isolated from radiolabeled EC cells by indirect immunoprecipitation. All three were efficiently labeled with fucose, galactose and glucosamine, but scarcely at all with mannose. The high molecular weight glycopeptides characteristic of early embryonic cells were released as the major glycopeptides upon pronase digestion of the three markers. The binding sites to the two lectins are present in the high molecular weight glycopeptides. Furthermore, a close correlation exists between the disappearance of the high molecular weight glycopeptides from differentiating EC cells and the disappearance of the three markers from the surface of these cells. The large glycopeptides from the three markers have the following properties in common. First, they are not mucin-type glycopeptides with short oligosaccharides, glycolipids and acidic mucopolysaccharides, nor are they products of incomplete pronase digestion of conventional complex-type glycopeptides. Second, they do not contain appreciable amounts of Fucα1→2Gal or Fucα1→6GlcNAc linkages. Third, a significant fraction of the glycopeptides have the GlcNAcβ→Gal sequence in their core structure. We propose that the cell surface markers of EC cells have a class of large carbohydrate chains not found in typical surface markers of adult cells such as H-2, la and LETS. © 1979.