Exposure of cultured small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cells to UV radiation induces apoptosis. We observed that the UV sensitivity of a panel of SCLC lines and the activation of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinases (JNKs) by UV in the individual SCLC lines, assessed by binding and phosphorylation of glutathione S-transferase (GST)-c-Jun fusion proteins, ranged widely. In fact, increased JNK activity in this assay was closely correlated with decreased sensitivity to apoptosis following UV irradiation. Increased JNK activity was also detected in anti-JNK1 immune complexes collected from UV-irradiated SCLC cells, although the level of activity was similar among the various SCLC lines and correlated poorly with UV sensitivity. Immunoblot analysis of JNK polypeptides that bound to GST-c-Jun revealed at least two JNK polypeptides, one of which appeared only in extracts from UV-irradiated SCLC. To test the role of JNKs in UV-induced apoptosis, nonphosphorylatable mutants of JNK1 or JNK2 in which the phosphorylation site Thr-Pro-Tyr is changed to Ala-Pro-Phe (JNK-APF) and are predicted to behave as competitive inhibitors were stably expressed in SCLC. Expression of JNK1-APF or JNK2-APF significantly reduced UV-stimulated JNK activity. However, JNK1-APF markedly increased the resistance of the cells to UV-induced apoptosis, while JNK2-APF did not influence SCLC sensitivity to UV. The findings suggest that UV-stimulated JNK1 activation promotes UV-induced SCLC apoptosis, while a JNK isoform that is variably activated among the SCLC lines may signal a UV-protective response. We hypothesize that integration of distinct JNK activities dictates the relative responsiveness of SCLC to UV and ionizing radiation.