We examined whether changes in intracellular reduced (GSH) or oxidized (GSSG) glutathione of human monocytes regulate lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced IL-12 production and defined the molecular mechanism that underlies glutathione redox regulation. Monocytes exposed to glutathione reduced form ethyl ester (GSH-OEt) or maleic acid diethyl ester (DEM) increased or decreased the intracellular GSH/GSSG ratio, respectively. LPS-induced IL-12 production and p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation were enhanced by GSH-OEt but suppressed by DEM. Selective p38 inhibitors showed that p38 promoted GSH-OEt-enhanced IL-12 production. Furthermore, IFN-gamma priming increased the GSH/GSSG ratio and enhanced IL-12 production through p38, and DEM negated the priming effect of IFN-gamma on p38 activation and IL-12 production as well as on the GSH/GSSG ratio. These findings reveal that glutathione redox regulates LPS-induced IL-12 production from monocytes through p38 MAP kinase activation and that the priming effect of IFN-gamma on IL-12 production is partly a result of the glutathione redox balance.