L-Histidine markedly increased the growth- and DNA synthesis-inhibitory effects elicited by hydrogen peroxide in cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells. DNA single-strand breakage was also higher in the presence of the amino acid and, in addition, these breaks were characterized by a slower rate of repair, compared with that of the breaks generated by the oxidant alone. In the presence of L-histidine, hydrogen peroxide also produced DNA double-strand breakage, a lesion that cannot be detected in cells treated with even exceedingly high concentrations of the oxidant alone. Data reported herein suggest that the L-histidine-mediated increase of the cytotoxic response of cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells to hydrogen peroxide may be at least partially dependent on the formation of DNA double-strand breaks.