Actin is a ubiquitous protein in eukaryotic cells. It plays a major role in cell motility and in the maintenance and control of cell shape. In this article, we intend to address the contribution of actin to the passive mechanical properties of human neutrophils. As a framework for assessing this contribution, the neutrophil is modeled as a simple viscous fluid drop with a constant cortical (''surface'') tension. The reagent cytochalasin B (CTB) was used to disrupt the F-actin structure, and the neutrophil cortical tension and cytoplasmic viscosity were evaluated by single-cell micropipette aspiration. The cortical tension was calculated by simple force balance, and the viscosity was calculated according to a numerical analysis of the cell entry into the micropipette. CTB reduced the cell cortical tension in a dose-dependent fashion: by 19% at a concentration of 3 mu M and by 49% at 30 mu M. CTB also reduced the cytoplasmic viscosity by similar to 25% at a concentration of 3 mu M and by similar to 65% at a concentration of 30 mu M when compared at the same aspiration pressures. All three groups of neutrophils, normal cells, and cells treated with either 3 or 30 mu M CTB, exhibited non-Newtonian behavior, in that the apparent viscosity decreased with increasing shear rate. The dependence of the cytoplasmic viscosity on deformation rate can be described empirically by mu = mu(c)(gamma(m)/gamma(c))(-b), where mu is cytoplasmic viscosity, gamma(m) is mean shear rate, mu(c) is the characteristic viscosity at the characteristic shear rate gamma(c), and b is a material coefficient. The shear rate dependence of the cytoplasmic viscosity was reduced by CTB treatment. This is reflected by the changes in the material coefficients. When gamma(c) was set to 1 s(-1), mu(c) = 130 +/- 23 Pa.s and b = 0.52 +/- 0.09 for normal neutrophils and mu(c) = 54 +/- 15 Pa.S and b = 0.26 +/- 0.05 for cells treated with 30 mu M CTB. These results provide the first quantitative assessment of the role that Pa.s-actin structure plays in the passive mechanical properties of human neutrophils.