A number of studies indicate that cell proliferation can be modulated by changes in the redox balance of (soluble and protein) cellular thiols. Free radical processes, including lipid peroxidation (LPO), can affect such a balance, and a role for LPO in multistage carcinogenesis has been envisaged. The present study was aimed to assess the relationships between the protein thiol redox status and the LPO process in chemically induced preneoplastic tissue. The Solt-Farber's initiation-promotion model of chemical carcinogenesis in the rat liver was used. In fresh cryostat sections, preneoplastic lesions were identified by the reexpression of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT) activity. In serial sections, different classes of protein thiols were stained; in additional sections, LPO was elicited by various prooxidant mixtures and determined thereafter by the hydroxynaphthoic hydrazide-Fast Blue B procedure. The incubation of sections in the presence of chelated iron plus substrates for GGT activity leads to the development of LPO in selected section areas closely corresponding to GGT-positive lesions, indicating the ability of GGT activity to initiate LPO. Protein-reactive thiols, as well as total protein sulfur, were decreased by 20-25% in cells belonging to GGT-positive preneoplastic nodules, suggesting the occurrence of oxidative conditions in vivo. The incubation of additional adjacent sections with the prooxidant mixture H2O2 plus iron(II), in order to induce the complete oxidation of lipid present in the section, showed a decreased basal concentration of oxidizable lipid substrate in GGT-rich areas. The decreased levels of both protein thiols and lipid-oxidizable substrate in GGT-positive nodules suggest that the observed GGT-dependent pathway of LPO initiation can be chronically operative in vivo during early stages of chemical carcinogenesis, in cells expressing GGT as part of their transformed phenotype.