Oxidative damage to cellular membranes critically controls the manifestation of cellular response to ionizing radiation. To gain further insight into the damaging mechanisms, we have investigated the effects of gamma-radiation-generated free-radical-mediated peroxidative damage in egg yolk lecithin unilamellar liposomal membranes by employing 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (DPH). Alterations in lipid bilayer fluidity and malondialdehyde (MDA) formation were measured in irradiated liposomal membranes as a function of radiation dose (0.1-1 kGy). A relationship seems to exist between the degree of radiation-induced peroxidative damage and the magnitude of DPH fluorescence decay in irradiated membranes. Radiation-induced membrane rigidization and MDA formation were significantly reduced when alpha-tocopherol, a natural membrane antioxidant, was present in the liposomes suggesting an involvement of lipid free radicals in the mechanism of the damage process. The results of the present study have been compared with those obtained by the electron spin resonance (ESR) technique on human erythrocyte ghost membranes with spin-labeled phospholipids having the unique capability to sensitively report on the dynamic state of the lipid environment inside the bilayer membrane. Iodoacetamide and N-ethylmaleimide spin labels were used to investigate alterations in membrane proteins. These results have contributed to our understanding of mechanisms involved in radiation membrane oxidative damage in terms of lipid peroxidation, fluidity changes and involvement of -SH groups of membrane proteins. Combined use of fluorescence and ESR spin-label techniques is of potential interest in probing the deeper molecular mechanisms of radiation injury in cellular membranes for developing strategies to modify the radiation damage to cells.