This study deals with the mechanism of the inhibitory effect exerted by the immunosuppressant ciclosporin (CsA) on phorbol-ester-induced inflammation, epidermal hyperplasia and tumor promotion in mouse skin in vivo. This effect coincides with an inhibition of the phosphorylation of a 100-kilodalton protein (p100) in epidermal cytosol in vitro, which has been identified as elongation factor 2 (EF-2) of protein biosynthesis. Phosphorylation of EF-2 is dependent on Ca2+ and calmodulin, and inhibition of EF-2 phosphorylation by CsA is due to an interaction of CsA with calmodulin. The EF-2 phosphorylation system has a metabolic half-life of 1.5 h probably due to a rather rapid turnover rate of the EF-2 kinase. Since CsA inhibits specifically 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TAP)-stimulated but not basal protein synthesis in epidermis, it is proposed that Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of EF-2 is involved in the induction of the hyperplastic response by TPA and that CsA suppresses TPA effects by inhibition of EF-2-phosphorylation and perhaps other calmodulin-dependent processes. The potential applicability of calmodulin inhibitors in the treatment of hyperproliferative skin diseases is discussed.