The tetrapeptide AcSDKP (Seraspenide) has been described as an inhibitor of CFU-S entry into DNA synthesis; as a result, its administration can protect mice against lethal doses of cytosine arabinoside. We have studied the ability of AcSDKP to protect and promote the growth of early CD34+ human bone marrow (BM) stem cells in Dexter long-term cultures following exposure to a toxic concentration of mafosfamide. The protection assay was based on the preincubation of CD34+ BM cells with or without AcSDKP at 10(-10)M or 10(-8)M followed by exposure to a toxic dose of mafosfamide (100 micrograms/mL). The production of granulomonocytic progenitor cells (CFU-GM) was subsequently studied in long-term bone marrow cultures (LTBMC) of the samples exposed to mafosfamide and preincubated or not (control) with AcSDKP. After a lag of 2 to 3 weeks, the number of CFU-GM peaked at the 4th to 5th week in both the supernatant and the adherent layers. A greater production of granulomonocytic progenitor cells was observed in LTBMC from the samples preincubated with AcSDKP compared with control cells. Depending on the BM samples, enhanced production of CFU-GM in the AcSDKP-treated cell cultures was observed at either the 10(-10)M or 10(-8)M concentration. These results suggest that AcSDKP can protect in vitro human long-term culture-initiating cells (LTC-IC) from mafosfamide, resulting in an increased production of CFU-GM from this early stem cell compartment.