We have cloned a human cDNA, SEMP1 (senescence-associated epithelial membrane protein 1), using differential display (DD) of mRNA. We compared mRNA expression profiles between cultured normal senescent human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs) and proliferating, early passage HMECs. From the amino acid sequence of the open reading frame (ORF) of the cDNA, we infer that the protein belongs to a family of membrane-associated, epithelial cell-specific proteins. The translation product has 91% identity to a mouse protein, claudin-1, a tight junction (TJ)-associated protein. SEMP1 mRNA is expressed in human tissues, including adult and fetal liver, pancreas, placenta, adrenals, prostate and ovary but at low or undetectable levels in a number of human breast cancer cell lines. SEMP1 is a member of a superfamily of epithelial membrane proteins (EMPs), which may have multiple potential functions, including maintenance and regulation of cell polarity and permeability, perhaps through mechanisms involving tight junctions.