Membrane fluidity of rat neutrophils was studied following Escherichia coli inoculation, and characteristic changes were observed. Membrane fluidity was assessed by the excimer-forming lipid technique using pyrenedecanoic acid and flow cytometry and expressed as the fluorescence intensity ratios of excimer and monomer pyrenedecanoic acid (IE/IM ratio). High IE/IM ratios indicated high membrane fluidity. The IE/IM ratio of rat neutrophils (0.50 +/- 0.048) increased after E. coli inoculation, reaching a maximum of almost 1.00 after 10-20 min and then returning to its starting value. Intravenous injection of heat-killed E. coli or E. coli-conditioned culture supernatants into rats induced a rapid increase of IE/IM ratios, which returned to initial levels after 20 min. The effect on membrane fluidity of in vitro neutrophil incubation with E. coli, heat-killed E. coli, or E. coli-conditioned culture supernatants was similar to that observed in vivo. Addition of 5 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) did not affect neutrophil membrane fluidity. Addition of either 5 micrograms/ml cytochalasin B or 10(-5) M colchicine did not directly affect neutrophil membrane fluidity but did block the change observed following incubation with bacteria.