Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), the most potent of the tumor promoting phorbol diesters, modulates function in several immunoresponsive cells following in vitro exposure. Since suppression of cellular mechanisms capable of limiting tumors and infections can adversely affect health, these experiments were designed to evaluate relevant components of cell-mediated immunity (CMI) following in vivo PMA exposure, and to determine the biological significance of any alterations utilizing assays of host resistance. Adult, female B6C3F1 mice were administered 0.2, 2.0, 20.0 or 40.0 μg PMA/g body weight subcutaneously over a two-week period. Mechanisms of cell-mediated host resistance were assessed by quantitating natural killer (NK), cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) and macrophage-mediated lysis of radiolabelled tumor target cells, and macrophage-induced cytostasis in tumor cell populations. Macrophages from PMA-treated mice were cytostatic to tumor cells, inhibiting up to 90% of growth in cultured tumor cells, but were not tumoricidal. Furthermore, pyran-elicited (primed) macrophages, which are activated to fully cytotoxic states by in vitro exposure to lipopolysaccharide, were inhibited in tumoricidal activation by in vivo PMA exposure. The induction of responsive but not cytotoxic macrophages by in vivo PMA exposure is consistent with the enhaced resistance to Listeria bacterial challenge, and increased susceptibility to B16F10 tumor and Trichinella parasitic challenges observed in these mice. Furthermore, previous reports of decreased in vitro NK activity following in vivo PMA exposure and present observations of correlative decreases of in vivo NK activity (55% decrease in mice exposed to 20 μg PMA/g) suggest an important role for NK activity in limiting in vivo B16F10 melanoma growth. CTL effector function was less susceptible to PMA-induced suppression than NK function at similar dosages, further supporting a predominant role of macrophages and NK cells or possibly other effector functions in the resistance to Listeria, Trichnella, or B16F10 challenge. Nevertheless, significant suppressive effects of PMA on CTL function at higher dosages cannot be excluded as contributing to altered host resistance to these agents. These studies demonstrate that in vivo exposure to PMA can modify cell-mediated mechanisms of host resistance with coincident alterations in the incidence of infections and tumors.