The potential of the calcium-entry blocker flunarizine in modulating the cytotoxicity of doxorubicin was investigated in human colon-adenocarcinoma cell lines sensitive to (LoVo) or with experimentally induced resistance (LoVo/DX) to doxorubicin. Exposure to 1 to 2 micrograms/ml flunarizine for intervals of up to 24 hr did not affect cell survival in either line. Simultaneous exposure to flunarizine and doxorubicin for 1 hr selectively enhanced doxorubicin activity in the resistant cell line and not in the sensitive cell line. In particular, the doxorubicin concentration able to reduce cell survival by 50% dropped to one third. Moreover, simultaneous exposure to flunarizine significantly increased intracellular doxorubicin accumulation, as evaluated by fluorescence spectrophotometry. Again, flow-cytometric analysis showed hyperpolarization of the membrane in resistant cells, starting from 15 min of exposure to 2 micrograms/ml flunarizine. Finally, in LoVo/DX cells, which normally express gp170, a 24-hr treatment with flunarizine markedly reduced the immunoreactivity of cells with 2 monoclonal antibodies (MAb57 and MRK16) directed against different external epitopes of the glycoprotein. The results from our study indicate the ability of flunarizine to positively modulate doxorubicin-resistance in human colon-adenocarcinoma cells expressing the multidrug-resistance phenotype.