Monocrotaline pyrrole (MCTP) causes pulmonary vascular endothelial cell (EC) injury followed by progressive pulmonary vascular leakin vivoand the inhibition of EC proliferationin vitro.It was hypothesized that MCTP inhibits cell proliferationin vitroby interfering with cell cycle progression in a cycle phase-specific manner. Furthermore, it was proposed that early alterations in MCTP-induced lung injury leading to hypertension were associated with a similar inhibition of EC proliferation. Subconfluent cultures of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BECs) were synchronized with aphidicolin (APH), a reversible G1–S phase inhibitor. Upon removal of APH, BECs were exposed to MCTP (5 μg/ml) or its vehicle for a 4-h interval corresponding to either the G1–S, S–G2, or G2through mitosis (M) phases of the cell cycle. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) was used to identify MCTP-induced changes in cell cycle progression in BECs, and the transit of S phase cells through the cycle was characterized through the incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Synchronized BECs exposed to MCTP between mid-S–G2or G2through M were briefly delayed in G2–M at 12 h but underwent cell division by 24 h. By contrast, BECs treated with MCTP immediately after release from APH block became arrested in G2–M at 24 h and showed evidence of continued DNA synthesis and hypertetraploidy, but they did not divide.In vivo,MCTP (3.5 mg/kg iv) administration caused an increase in arterial EC BrdU incorporation between Days 3 and 7, but no increase in EC density. During this same interval, pulmonary vascular permeability increased and persisted. In summary, MCTP inhibits cell proliferation in a cell cycle phase-dependent mannerin vitro.The results suggest that a similar mechanism could occurin vivoand may be associated with delayed EC repair, a process that could contribute to persistent pulmonary vascular leak.