In the present study, we investigated the mechanisms by which zinc causes growth arrest in colon cancer cells. The results suggest that zinc treatment stabilizes the levels of the wild-type adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein at the post-translational level since the APC mRNA levels and the promoter activity of the APC gene were decreased in HCT-116 cells (which express the wild-type APC gene) after treatment with ZnCl2. Increased levels of wild-type but not truncated APC proteins were required for the ZnCl2-mediated G(2)/M phase arrest in different colon cancer cell lines. We further tested whether serum-stimulation, which induces cell cycle arrest in the S phase, can relieve ZnCl2-induced G(2)/M phase arrest of HCT-116 cells. Results showed that in the HCT-116 cells pretreated with ZnCl2, the serum-stimulation neither changed the distribution of G(2)/M phase arrested cells nor the increased levels of APC protein. The G(2)/M phase arrest correlated with retarded growth of HCT-116 cells. To further establish that wild-type APC protein plays a role in ZnCl2-induced G(2)/M arrest, we treated SW480 colon cancer cells that express truncated APC protein. We found that ZnCl2 treatment did not induce G(2)/M phase arrest in SW480 cells; however, the cell growth was retarded due to the loss of E-cadherin and alpha-tubulin levels. These results suggest that ZnCl2 inhibits the proliferation of colon cancer cells (which carry the wild-type APC gene) through stabilization of the APC protein and cell cycle arrest in the G(2)/M phase. On the other hand, ZnCl2 inhibits the proliferation of colon cancer cells (which carry the mutant APC gene) by disrupting cellular attachment and microtubule stability. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.