The rate of the basal activity of the serine/threonine protein kinase, protein kinase C (PKC) in the regulation of anti-CD95-induced apoptosis in Jurkat T cells was investigated. The PKC-specific inhibitor GF 109203X and the proposed cPKC-specific inhibitor Go 6976, in a concentration-dependent manner, increased the percentage of cells undergoing apoptosis induced by anti-CD95 mAb as demonstrated by propidium iodide (PB staining, TUNEL assay and DNA fragmentation by gel electrophoresis, Furthermore, Go 6976 and GF 109203X abrogated phorbol myristate acetate-induced inhibition of anti-CD95-induced apoptosis, To examine the molecular mechanism by which PKC modulates anti-CD95-induced apoptosis, the effects of Go 6976 on known effector and regulatory molecules of cell death were studied. Increased recruitment of cells undergoing apoptosis was associated with enhanced anti-CD95-induced proteolytic cleavage of the most receptor-proximal cysteine protease caspase-8, subsequent cleavage and activation of the machinery protease caspase-3, and cleavage of the caspase substrates DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit, poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase and lamin B1, CD95 and FADD protein levels in Jurkat T cells were not altered by Go 6976 treatment. In addition, Go 6976 did not alter protein levels and subcellular distribution of the anti-apoptotic molecules Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L). These data suggest indirectly that basal PKC activity acts at an early stage in the anti-CD95-induced caspase pathway to attenuate subsequent activation of downstream effector molecules and associated apoptosis in Jurkat T cells.