Earlier studies in our laboratory showed that the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Salmonella typhi, which fails to activate B lymphocytes of C3H/HeJ mice, can suppress proliferation and polyclonal antibody synthesis by these cells when they are stimulated by polyclonal activators. In order to determine what stage of the cell cycle was blocked, resting B cells from C3H/HeJ spleens were activated by using different mitogens in the presence of inhibitory concentrations of LPS and analyzed by flow cytometry, using acridine orange to stain DNA and RNA. LPS was found to inhibit the progression of cells into the G1 stage of the cell cycle. Furthermore, [3H]uridine uptake studies showed that RNA synthesis is inhibited during the early phase of activation. These results indicate that inhibition by LPS of the signalling process occurs during a critical period of the cell cycle when the cells become susceptible to the inhibitory effects of LPS. To examine whether LPS acts only on B cells or whether it can suppress other immunocompetent cells from C3H/HeJ mice, studies were carried out on activated thymocytes and macrophages. LPS was found to inhibit thymocyte proliferation stimulated by concanavalin A or the combination of phorbol myristate acetate and ionomycin. Prostaglandin E2 synthesis by macrophages was also blocked by LPS. Thus, LPS is a potent inhibitor of the functioning of the major immunocompetent cells of C3H/HeJ mice.