To demonstrate ultrastructural events in the early phase of hepatic metastasis of human colon carcinoma, we intrasplenically injected a highly metastasizable, human colon carcinoma cell line LM-H3 (1 x 10(6) cells) into nude mice, and electron microscopically investigated the hepatic metastasis. At 24 h, tumor cells adhered to the endothelial wall of terminal portal venules and periportal sinusoids. At 48-72 h, after extravasation, they deeply invaded the hepatic cell plate and the interstitial tissue of the portal tract, in which they underwent proliferation and made the metastatic foci. Tumor cells were linked with each other or with surrounding hepatocytes by desmosomes. Desmosomes were maintained during the mitosis. When invading tumor cells were exposed to the bile canaliculi, they generated microvilli on the surface. Microvilli were also formed at the luminal surface of intracytoplasmic inclusions. In the interstitial tissue of the portal tract, tumor cells were closely associated with fibroblasts. However, no junctional specializations were seen between them. The present study demonstrated that human colon carcinoma cell line LM-H3 formed desmosomes with hepatocytes soon after invasion of the hepatic cell plate, suggesting the regulatory role of an interaction with hepatocytes in the growth of metastatic foci within the liver parenchyma.