CD28 is the major costimulatory molecule on T cells. CD28 activation, in conjunction with T-cell receptor engagement, upregulates transcription of several cytokines, including interleukin-2 (IL-2), through transcriptional activation of the RE/AP composite element, Although CD28 is not normally expressed on B cells or plasma cells, more than 90% of extramedullary myelomas (a late stage B-cell neoplasm) express CD28, The functional significance of this is unknown, The results of this study demonstrate that CD28 stimulates transcriptional activation of RE/AP-based reporters in B cells and myeloma cells. However, CD28 stimulation does not up-regulate IL-2 production in myeloma cell lines, demonstrating that the IL-2 promoter may not be a relevant RE/AP-containing target of CD28 in myelomas, Instead, an RE/AP composite element has been identified within the promoter of the IL-8 gene, a chemokine that promotes angiogenesis. Furthermore, stimulation of endogenous CD28 expressed by 3 myeloma cell lines increased IL-8 production. Therefore, the study demonstrates that CD28 is functional in myelomas to up-regulate transcription of endogenous genes, including IL-8, The proposal is made that aberrant expression of CD28 may play a role in the progression of multiple myeloma, (C) 2001 by The American Society of Hematology.