The U(S)3 protein kinase of herpes simplex virus 1 blocks apoptosis induced by replication-incompetent virus mutants, proapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family of proteins, and by a variety of other agents that act at the premitochondrial level in the proapoptotic cascade. To define the role of U(S)3 in blocking apoptosis at the postmitochondrial level, we investigated the U,3 protein kinase in transduced cells that were either transfected with a plasmid encoding procaspase 3 or superinfected with a proapoptotic mutant virus lacking the gene encoding the infected cell protein no. 4. (i) We show that U(S)3 blocks the proteolytic cleavage that generates active caspase 3 from the transfected zymogen procaspase 3, concomitant with inhibition of apoptosis. (ii) Studies based on detection of fluorescence emitted upon cleavage of a synthetic caspase 3 substrate showed that expression of the U(S)3 kinase and appearance of the cleaved substrate were mutually exclusive. (iii) An affinity-purified glutathione S-transferase (GST)-U(s)3 fusion protein, but not the inactive GST-U(S)3(K220N) protein, phosphorylated procaspase 3 in vitro. The studies published earlier on the effect of U(S)3 on the upstream regulatory proteins and current studies suggest that the U(S)3 protein kinase may act on several proteins in the proapoptotic cascade to enable the virus to complete its replication.