5-Lipoxygenase catalyzes the synthesis of leukotrienes from arachidonic acid, The subcellular distribution of 5-lipoxygenase is known to be cell type dependent and is cytosolic in blood neutrophils. In this study, we asked whether neutrophil recruitment into sites of inflammation can alter the subcellular compartmentation of 5-lipoxygenase. In peripheral blood neutrophils from rats, 5-lipoxygenase was exclusively cytosolic, as expected, However, in glycogen-elicited peritoneal neutrophils, abundant soluble 5-lipoxygenase was in the nucleus, Upon activation with calcium ionophore A23187, intranuclear 5-lipoxygenase translocated to the nuclear envelope, Elicited neutrophils required a greater concentration of A23187 for activation than did blood neutrophils (half-maximal response, 160 versus 52 nM, respectively) but generated greater amounts of leukotriene B-4 upon maximal stimulation (26.6 versus 7.68 ng/10(6) cells, respectively), Intranuclear 5-lipoxygenase was also evident in human blood neutrophils after adherence to a variety of surfaces, suggesting that adherence alone is sufficient to drive 5-lipoxygenase redistribution, These results demonstrate a physiologically relevant circumstance in which the subcellular distribution of 5-lipoxygenase can be rapidly altered in resting cells, independent of 5-lipoxygenase activation, Nuclear import of 5-lipoxygenase may be a universal accompaniment of neutrophil recruitment into sites of inflammation, and this may be associated with alterations in enzymatic function.