The addition of IL-6 to the IL-6-dependent B9-55 hybridoma cells starved for IL-6 for 16 h induced an increased phosphorylation of a 25-kda protein (p25). Phosphorylation of p25 was IL-6 dependent and maximal at 5 min after IL-6 stimulation. Phosphorylation of p25 was inhibited by N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalene sulfonamide (W-7), an inhibitor of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, but not by tyrphostin nor ionomycin. When enolase was used as an exogenous substrate, similar results were obtained. Furthermore, calmodulin stimulated p25 phosphorylation in vitro. IL-6-starved B9 hybridoma cells synthesized DNA at 9 to 12 h after addition of IL-6. Preincubation of cells with W-7 before IL-6 stimulation blocked DNA synthesis. Similar effects were observed when cells were preincubated with tyrphostin or ionomycin but to a lesser extent. The concentrations of W-7 required for blocking p25 phosphorylation and DNA synthesis correlated relatively well. These results suggest that an IL-6-inducible calmodulin-dependent protein kinase is involved in IL-6 signal transduction, including p25 phosphorylation and B9 hybridoma proliferation.