Theophylline-treated cells of the human melanoma line showed an increase in NK-sensitivity in vitro and a concomitant decrease in tumorigenicity and spontaneous metastasis in Balb/c nude mice. The MeWo cells were heterogeneous and contained related subpopulations which were cloned to produce two cell lines, one hypodiploid (Cd-16) and one hypotetraploid (Ct-1). Prolonged (3 months) or short-term (4 days) treatment of these cell lines with 1 mM theophylline markedly reduced the incidence and size of tumors in Balb/c nude mice early after s.c. injection and their ability to metastasize spontaneously to the lung was also reduced. The effect was much more pronounced with Cd-16 cells, which contain amplified DNA compared to Ct-1 cells which lack DNA amplification. Part of the tumor inhibition caused by theophylline was due to natural killer (NK) cells. Thus, in vivo treatment of nude mice with anti-asialo GM1, a procedure known to remove NK cells, partially reversed the inhibitory effects of theophylline on tumor formation and generation of metastasis by Cd-16 cells. Consistent with this observation theophylline treatment enhanced the in vitro NK sensitivity of Cd-16 cells four-fold whereas Ct-1 was enhanced only slightly. The data suggest that theophylline can act preferentially on certain tumor cell subpopulations to enhance their NK-sensitive phenotype and thereby inhibit their capacity to form tumors and to metastasize in nude mice.