The effect of various interferons (HN) on neutrophilic granulocyte (PMN) random and directed migration is incompletely understood, We, therefore, investigated PMN migration with a novel micropore membrane technique, No chemotactic effect of either 10-10000 U/ml IFN-alpha or IFN-beta, or 1-1000 U/ml IFN-gamma was observed on PMN isolated from normal human venous blood, However, when present on both sides of the micropore membrane, all the IFN (1000 U/ml IFN-alpha and IFN-beta, 100 U/ml IFN-gamma) inhibited both random and directed migration toward zymosan-activated serum (ZAS), IFN-gamma was the most potent inhibitory agent and produced an inhibition of about 30%, When the bacterial peptide fMLP was used as a chemoattractant, IFN-gamma also depressed chemotaxis, Taking the reduced random migration of IFN-gamma treated cells into account, however, chemotaxis per se-toward both ZAS and fMLP-was not significantly affected, Random migration and directed migration assessed simultaneously with PMN from the same donor were clearly correlated for both control and IFN-gamma treated cells, suggesting that a general antimotility effect of IFN-gamma might explain both reduced random migration and chemotaxis, The antimotility effect of IFN-gamma was not dependent on protein synthesis or on tyrosine kinase activity, In fact, inhibition of tyrosine kinase with herbimycin A increased the ZAS-stimulated motility of both control and IFN-gamma-inhibited PMN, In conclusion, our data indicate that IFN depress both random and directed PMN migration by mechanisms that do not involve protein synthesis or protein tyrosine kinase activity.