The biological properties of the HMV-1 virus, spontaneously released from a human X C57BL/6 mouse hybrid cell line, were similar to those of RadLV, the prototype B-tropic virus of C57BL/6 mice. Both viruses replicated on B-type mouse cells and in the wild mouse cell line SC-1. The plaque-forming abilities of the two viruses were relatively low, but gradually increased after passage in new host cells. Both viruses were neutralized by AKR antisera but not by FMR antisera. HMV-1 virus could rescue the defective sarcoma genome from S+H- mouse cells. The pseudotype sarcoma virus so produced was deficient in "helper virus" activity. Newborn mice inoculated with HMV-1 virus remained tumor-free over a 1-yr observation period.