This paper describes the measurement of S phase DNA content in human bone marrow subpopulations using a single laser method for bivariate analysis of DNA content and cell-surface immunofluorescence (s-IF). Low density (less than 1.077 g/ml) bone marrow cells were labeled with a panel of unconjugated monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) for the lymphoid (CD2 + CD19), T-lymphoid (CD2), B-lymphoid (CD19), erythroid (anti-glycophorin-A), myelomonocytic (CD13, CD33; single and as cocktail) and monocytic (CD14) lineages. A fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated goat anti-mouse label was used as second step. Unfixed, MoAb-labeled cells were incubated for 24 h with a hypotonic propidium iodide solution for DNA staining. Cells were analysed on a single-laser flow cytometer, operating at 488 nm. The effect of the combined staining protocol upon both s-IF and DNA stainability was evaluated. Only a slight decrease (mean: 29.0%) in s-IF intensity was observed after DNA staining. The percentages of immunofluorescent cells in the bone marrow samples of 10 normal individuals before and after DNA staining were essentially unchanged for all the MoAbs used. The DNA histograms of the immunophenotypically defined subpopulations were of excellent quality with a mean coefficient or variation of 1.8%. This procedure allows the assessment of very low levels of S-phase DNA content, as measured in normal low density blood cells of 8 healthy volunteers (mean 0.07%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)