Aspirin and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit proliferation of human colon cancer cells in vitro. Transmission electron microscope detected morphological features of apoptosis in the aspirin-treated (5 mM, 72 h) HT-29 cells in which cyclooxygenoase-2 is catalytically inactive. We investigated aspirin-induced genome-wide expression changes in HT-29 cells and further studied the time- and concentration-dependent expression changes in 374 apoptosis-related genes, which is the first to show stimulation of genome-wide expression of HT-29 cells by aspirin. The most marked effects of aspirin are on ribosome assembly and rRNA metabolism, which could explain why the quasi-apoptotic morphological changes are not accompanied by a classical DNA ladder. These findings demonstrate that aspirin induces apoptosis in HT-29 cells, bolstering the hypothesis that apoptosis may be a mechanism by which NSAIDs inhibit colon carcinogenesis.