The cyanoguanidine CHS 828 has shown promising antitumor properties and is currently in early clinical trials, although the mechanism of action still is largely unknown. In this study, resistant sublines of the histiocytic lymphoma cell line U-937 GTB and the myeloma line RPMI 8226 were developed by culturing under gradually increasing concentrations of CHS 828 until reaching 25 times the parental line EC50s. The new phenotypes demonstrate more than 400-fold resistance to CHS 828 and cross-resistance to six cyanoguanidine analogs, but no resistance to nine standard drugs of different mechanistic classes or to the cytotoxic guanidines m-iodobenzylguanidine and methylglyoxal-bis(guanylhydrazone). The resistant phenotypes were stable for several months even if cultivated in drug-free medium and no difference in proliferation, ultrastructural or morphologic appearance in the sublines could be detected. Neither was decreased accumulation of tritium-labeled CHS 828 observed. Furthermore, the new U-937 phenotype was not accompanied by changes in differentiation or an altered cell-cycle distribution. In the myeloma cell line, esterase activity was shown to be moderately enhanced. Two-dimensional protein electrophoresis was undertaken to unmask possible resistance-mediating proteins and/or the target molecule(s) for CHS 828. In the myeloma cell line, lambda light chain immunoglobulin (down-regulated) and a fatty acid-binding protein (up-regulated) were identified. The findings presented here indicate that development of specific cellular alterations is responsible for the gained CHS 828 resistance.